This is very confusing. I assumed at first that a gallon was 4 quarts + 8 pints + 16 cups, a weird way to write 8 quarts.... Because a quart in my interpretation is 2 pints + 4 cups = 8 cups. I mean the diagram does show the gallon containing all of them.
Unless you specify which pint, gallon then you're probably wrong anywhere outside the US. Even then you could have to deal with vintage Canadian equipment with imperial labeling.
US Cups are random in measurement and only sometimes half a pint.
The imperial fluid oz. has one value 28.413 ml
The US fl. oz used to be 29.573 ml. But now can officially be 30 ml in some settings.
Metric is the best system, followed by imperial which at least is still a consistent standard.
Then US customary measures where the written value may or may not have to meet a standard these days.
The US has been using metric for everything important for a long time now like the rest of the world. Except the Mars probe NASA crashed.
I live in a country where these measurements aren't used, so without any background knowledge I interpreted the comma as "and" at first. Looking at the picture, I'm pretty sure it's meant to be "or" instead, in which case they should have used a slash instead of a comma imo.
Kind of like a cross between venison, lamb and herring. Very dark meat, very flavourful but not foul tasting like seal meat. Don't get me wrong, it's not as good as reindeer or moose, but it's not bad.
Thanks for the description, so it’s basically its own complex flavor if it’s in between so many things. Never tried seal either, do they taste like they smell? Were do you even get to try all those things? Alaska? Or you travel?
Imperial (used in the British Empire) vs US customary. The imperial fluid gallon (4.54609 L exactly) was never historically defined in terms of another unit while the US fluid gallon was defined as 231 cubic inches (3.785411784 L exactly). A pint is defined as 1/16 of a gallon in each system, but they can't agree on how many ounces are in a pint (16 for US, 20 for imperial). Note that there are also imperial and US customary dry gallons and thus imperial and US customary dry pints...
That adds a hilarious new dimension to how shitty the Imperial system is because I had no idea that different countries would just define their own versions of the measurements.
volume? at least here thats how its measured when you get that mixed 60/40% with propane (i think) for your car as LPG. but then its under pressure and due to that a liquid