That is approximately 3/4 cup
Pints, liquid or dry, are a measure of volume and ounces are a measure of weight, so they cannot be compared. However, a liquid pint is .4732 l and a dry pint is .551 l, so the dry pint is 1.164 liquid pints. Since a liquid pint is 16 fluid ounces, you could measure a dry pint as 18.63 fluid ounces.
2 pints. In US measure, 1 pint = 2 cups And 1 cup = 0.5 pint. There are 16 US fluid ounces, 2 cups in 1 US pint (473.2 ml). Although there are 20 Imperial fluid ounces in 1 Imperial pint (568.3 ml), the Imperial system does not have cups, so it is best to use half pints.
The words "dry measure" complicate and confound the question somewhat. There is no such thing as a dry cup. But there is a dry pint and a liquid pint. And since you said TWO cups dry measure, that implies a dry pint. One dry pint is equal to about 18.6 fluid ounces. (A liquid pint [US] is equal to 16 fluid ounces.) So, multiply 18.6 by 0.15 (15 percent) to get 2.79 ounces, or slightly more than two and three-quarters ounces. 15 percent of 16 is 2.4 ounces.
REM...........but for humans usually measured in Milirem. Also RADS
There are approximately 4 cups of dry beans in 800 grams.
I am researching this question too. I just bought a dry pint of blueberries and it has 12 oz. of blueberries by weight. This translates to 3/4 of a pund. Although, I thought a dry pint is supposed to have 2.33 cups by volume, when I measured it there was only 2 cups of blueberries. The package is labeled drypint. I don't know if it differs from those that are labeled with just pint. I am researching further. -Trent http:/blog.smartshopit.com My husband and I sell blueberries...we have a 2 acre patch. We sell by the pound and are constantly getting this question. You have a liquid pint measurement and dry pint measure...liquid only translates to 2 cups...dry pint, or 2 cups, translates to 12 ounces.....you definitely get more bang for your buck if you buy by the pound!! ~!Marilyn/njquilts
I am researching this question too. I just bought a dry pint of blueberries and it has 12 oz. of blueberries by weight. This translates to 3/4 of a pund. Although, I thought a dry pint is supposed to have 2.33 cups by volume, when I measured it there was only 2 cups of blueberries. The package is labeled drypint. I don't know if it differs from those that are labeled with just pint. I am researching further. -Trent http:/blog.smartshopit.com My husband and I sell blueberries...we have a 2 acre patch. We sell by the pound and are constantly getting this question. You have a liquid pint measurement and dry pint measure...liquid only translates to 2 cups...dry pint, or 2 cups, translates to 12 ounces.....you definitely get more bang for your buck if you buy by the pound!! ~!Marilyn/njquilts
Pints, liquid or dry, are a measure of volume and ounces are a measure of weight, so they cannot be compared. However, a liquid pint is .4732 l and a dry pint is .551 l, so the dry pint is 1.164 liquid pints. Since a liquid pint is 16 fluid ounces, you could measure a dry pint as 18.63 fluid ounces.
12oz/dry pint, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture. It is important to note that a dry pint (how blueberries are sold) is 16.36% larger than a the more commonly used liquid pint (2 cup measure). A liquid pint of blueberries would weigh approximately 10.3oz (292g), which is about 145g/cup. A flat (tray) of blueberries (12 dry pints) should weigh approximately 9lbs (sans containers). Update: I just weighed several level dry pints of freshly picked blueberries. 12oz - 12.5oz each. I’d say 12oz/dry pint is a good figure to use.
1 pint [US,dry] = 2.3272943877 cup [US].
2 pints. In US measure, 1 pint = 2 cups And 1 cup = 0.5 pint. There are 16 US fluid ounces, 2 cups in 1 US pint (473.2 ml). Although there are 20 Imperial fluid ounces in 1 Imperial pint (568.3 ml), the Imperial system does not have cups, so it is best to use half pints.
The term "dry pint" is a standard measurement used for dry goods like fruits, where one dry pint equals approximately 11.8 ounces. However, for practical purposes, some containers round this down to 11 ounces, which is more convenient for packaging and consumer understanding. This slight variation allows for easier handling and marketing while still providing a reasonable approximation of the volume of blueberries contained within.
The words "dry measure" complicate and confound the question somewhat. There is no such thing as a dry cup. But there is a dry pint and a liquid pint. And since you said TWO cups dry measure, that implies a dry pint. One dry pint is equal to about 18.6 fluid ounces. (A liquid pint [US] is equal to 16 fluid ounces.) So, multiply 18.6 by 0.15 (15 percent) to get 2.79 ounces, or slightly more than two and three-quarters ounces. 15 percent of 16 is 2.4 ounces.
2 cups = 1 pint, 8 pints = 1 gallon, so 16 cups = 1 gallon 30 X 16 = 480
1 pint [US,dry] = 2.3272943877 cup [US]
REM...........but for humans usually measured in Milirem. Also RADS
These are both very antiquated measurements so they both have various definitions. I'll try to give all the answers so you can choose the one that suits you. A cup can be metric = 250 ml imperial = 0.5 imp pint = 1/16 imp gallon = 284.130625 ml US Customary = 1/16 US liquid gallon = 236.5882365 ml US legal = 240ml Japanese = 200ml tradition Japanese ≈ 180ml A Pint can be imperial = 1/8 imp gallon = 568.26125 ml US liquid = 1/8 US liquid gallon = 473.176473 ml US dry = 1/8 US dry gallon = 550.6104713575 ml 1 imperial pint = 2.273045 metric cups = 2 imperial cups = 2.401899851 US customary cups = 2.367755208 US legal cups = 2.84130625 Japanese cups ≈ 3.157006944 traditional Japanese cups 1 US liquid pint = 1.892705892 metric cups = 1.665348369 imperial cups = 2 US customary cups = 1.971568638 US legal cups = 2.365882365 Japanese cups ≈ 2.628758183 traditional Japanese cups 1 US dry pint = 2.202441885 metric cups = 1.937877944 imperial cups = 2.327294372 US customary cups = 2.294210297 US legal cups = 2.753052357 Japanese cups ≈ 3.058947063 traditional Japanese cups