I believe Canada and the UK do similarly.
I believe Canada and the UK do similarly.
Easy solution: only buy drinks in aluminum cans or glass bottles. World is already drowning in microplastic pollution.
For universities, sure. But not for US public elementary and high schools. They’re just poor.
Not really a US thing, most carriers here offer unlimited data. More of a Canadian and European issue.
Most ammunition, especially ammo used at a range, are copper jacketed. There is no exposure to lead when handling most ammo.
I bet you’re fun at parties.
Where is this at? I’ve never seen 440ml or 440ml cans in North America. Canned drinks/beers usually come in 355ml (12 US ounces), 473ml (16oz), 500ml (16.9 oz), or 19.2 US ounces (20 British ounces aka British pint). Other less common sizes are 8oz (236ml / Red Bull) and big beer formats like 24oz and 32oz (just shy of a litre).
404ml is around 13.66 US ounces or 14.2 imperial ounces. 440ml is around 14.7 US ounces or 15.5 imperial ounces.
Usually when you get a measurement that’s not a nice round number like 500 or 750 it means it was probably converted from some other measurement standard. But both measurements seem completely arbitrary for what I assume is an English speaking country.
I looked through some antique measurements but didn’t find anything useful. It seems to be more than half a chungah, but far less than a butt.
If you pass the Cheeky Sausage, you’ve gone too far.
Do you drink a lot of sugary drinks? Haven’t had a cavity since I quit drinking (non-sugar free) sodas.
Do you say kilometers per litre or miles per gallon?
Edit: re-read. The UK still uses mpg, I believe