To determine the number of jelly beans in a 64 oz jar, we need to know the average volume of a jelly bean. Let's assume a typical jelly bean has a volume of about 0.25 cubic inches. Next, we convert the volume of the jar from ounces to cubic inches (64 oz ≈ 1478.7 cubic inches). Dividing the volume of the jar by the volume of a jelly bean gives us approximately 5915 jelly beans in a 64 oz jar.
There are 21.875% black jelly beans.
64
Approx 460 of them.
1,000-3,000 pennies
It is impossible. A replica is an exact copy, not a model. So the replica of the universe must contain a replica of the jelly baby universe that you are building inside it, and that, in turn, must contain ... oh, my head hurts!Even if you were trying to make a model, there are an estimated 1024 or 1 septillion stars in the universe. There are approx 16 billion for jelly beans made for Easter each year in the US. Quadruple that for the rest of the year and other countries = 64 billion. Multiply by the age of humankind (200 thousand years). So even if from the start, mankind had nothing better to do than to make jelly beans, you would need 80 million times as many jelly babies for the stars alone. Add in the planets, asteroids, meteors and comets and you will see why it is impossible.
16 ounces of green beans would be four 1/2 cup servings.
$8.14
To determine how many candy corn can fill a 64-ounce jar, we first need to know the volume of a single candy corn. Let's assume a standard candy corn has a volume of approximately 0.25 cubic inches. To convert 64 ounces to cubic inches, we multiply by 1.80469 (1 ounce = 1.80469 cubic inches). Therefore, a 64-ounce jar can hold around 231 candy corns (64 oz * 1.80469 in^3/oz / 0.25 in^3/candy corn).
Well, honey, a quart jar can hold around 64 fluid ounces. Assuming each Skittle is roughly 0.06 cubic inches, you could fit approximately 2,747 Skittles in a quart jar. But hey, who's really counting when you're just trying to satisfy that sweet tooth, am I right?
There are 225 dimes in a quart jar of 32 ounces. Each dime weighs about 2.268 grams, and there are approximately 454 grams in a pound, so 32 ounces is roughly equivalent to 907 grams. Dividing this by the weight of a dime gives us 225.
Alfred Hitchcock episode "The Jar". Aired 2-16-64 http://www.alfredsplace.com/presents.htm
A 4 x 4 x 4 inch jar typically has a volume of 64 cubic inches. To convert this to ounces, you would need to know the density of the material the jar is made of. Without that information, it is not possible to provide an accurate conversion to ounces.