1/3 Pound of Milk to Ml Conversion

Questions: How many milliliters of milk in 1/3 pound? How much is 1/3 pound of milk in ml?

The answer is: 1/3 pound of milk is equivalent to 146 milliliters(*)

'Weight' to Volume Converter

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weight ?Enter the amount of the mass measurement (weight). The calculator accepts fractional values such as: 1/2 (half), 1/3 (1 third), etc.
unit ? Choose the unit of mass (Kilogram, milligram, ounce, etc.)
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Results

1/3 pound of milk equals 146 milliliters.
(*) To be more precise, 1/3 pound of milk is equal to 145.93 milliliters. All figures are approximate.

Pounds of milk to milliliters Chart

Pounds of milk to milliliters
0.2433 pound of milk = 107 milliliters
0.2533 pound of milk = 111 milliliters
0.2633 pound of milk = 115 milliliters
0.2733 pound of milk = 120 milliliters
0.2833 pound of milk = 124 milliliters
0.2933 pound of milk = 128 milliliters
0.3033 pound of milk = 133 milliliters
0.3133 pound of milk = 137 milliliters
0.3233 pound of milk = 142 milliliters
0.333 pound of milk = 146 milliliters
Pounds of milk to milliliters
0.333 pound of milk = 146 milliliters
0.3433 pound of milk = 150 milliliters
0.3533 pound of milk = 155 milliliters
0.3633 pound of milk = 159 milliliters
0.3733 pound of milk = 163 milliliters
0.3833 pound of milk = 168 milliliters
0.3933 pound of milk = 172 milliliters
0.4033 pound of milk = 177 milliliters
0.4133 pound of milk = 181 milliliters
0.4233 pound of milk = 185 milliliters

Note: some values may be rounded.

FAQs on milk volume to weight conversion

1/3 pound of milk equals how many milliliters?

1/3 pound of milk is equivalent 146 milliliters.

How much is 146 milliliters of milk in pounds?

146 milliliters of milk equals 1/3 ( ~ 1/4) pound.

Notes on ingredient measurements

It is a bit tricky to get an accurate food conversion since its characteristics change according to humidity, temperature, or how well packed the ingredient is. Ingredients that contain the terms sliced, minced, diced, crushed, chopped add uncertainties to the measurements. A good practice is to measure ingredients by weight, not by volume so that the error is decreased.

Disclaimer

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