How much water is equivalent to a 'cup' ?
mollymorgan7
Posts: 1 Member
Hi can anyone help me with this question please? How much water do they measure as being in one 'cup' ? Thank you
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Replies
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depends, dry cup or wet cup?
There's also an imperial cup used to create the imperial pint.0 -
8 ounces
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Technically 8 ounces - but as long as you're keeping hydrated and your pee is almost clear you're good to go.0
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A cup of water in the US is typically 8oz of water, or 236ml or 0.24 liters.
The 8 'glass' goal is around 1.9 liters total.0 -
mollymorgan7 wrote: »Hi can anyone help me with this question please? How much water do they measure as being in one 'cup' ? Thank you
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8 ounces, typically, Molly...0
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250ml is what I use to measure a cup.0
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You're kidding, right?
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But what if she's asking about a cup of heavy water? Diet water? Big differences here, folks.0
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47Jacqueline wrote: »You're kidding, right?
People outside of the US don't use 'cups' as a form of measurement, this question comes up every now and then.0 -
I've never understood why cookbooks always use 250ml as equivalent to a cup, when 240 is divisible by 8 and closer to the actual volume anyway (236). It makes no sense; no one uses 1/5 of a cup, why round it to such an inconvenient number?
Maybe that's why I don't cook.
No, wait, it's because I'm lazy.0 -
sheepotato wrote: »47Jacqueline wrote: »You're kidding, right?
People outside of the US don't use 'cups' as a form of measurement, this question comes up every now and then.
I'm in Australia and regularly use cups as measurements
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Imperial cups?0
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Metric..0
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a metric cup. THE FOURTH CUP TYPE!0
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Wow okay... (I had to know what the third cup was, if metric was the fourth all I could find was a Japanese cup) I'm going to assume the OP meant what sort of 'cup' is MFP going by, and it's the US customary cup. Just count a standard glass (whatever it's measured in) as a cup of water.
U.S. customary cup = 236ml
Imperial cup= 284ml
Australian metric cup = 250ml
Japanese cup = 200ml
A 'legal' US cup =240 ml (whatever legal means)0 -
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I've been taking it literally: 8 ounces. It's frustrating, though, because my cup at work is 22 ounces. Not quite 3 "cups", but way more than 2. I wish MFP would measure water in ounces like Fitbit does0
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I prefer a B cup or C cup, but I have heard that a lot of people prefer D cup or larger.0
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I've been taking it literally: 8 ounces. It's frustrating, though, because my cup at work is 22 ounces. Not quite 3 "cups", but way more than 2. I wish MFP would measure water in ounces like Fitbit does
As my hydration specialist Deependatha Poole says "you *may* be overthinking it."
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8 ounces.0
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You can fill a DD cup with more water than in an A cup.0
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sheepotato wrote: »
Agreed, there's holes in it. That's annoying.0 -
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i do 8 oz. as my cups of water to drink. different if measuring for baking, etc. depending on the recipe.0
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Which weighs more, a cup of gold or a cup of feathers?0
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