Alcohol measurement

Wine bottle

A wine bottle is a bottle, generally a glass bottle, that is used for holding wine. Some wines are fermented in the bottle while others are bottled only after fermentation. Recently the bottle has become a standard unit of volume to describe sales in the wine industry, measuring 750 millilitres (26.40 imp fl oz; 25.36 US fl oz). Wine bottles are produced, however, in a variety of volumes and shapes. Wine bottles are traditionally sealed with a cork, but screw-top caps are becoming popular, and there are several other methods used to seal a bottle. (Wikipedia).

Wine bottle
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Why Are Wine Bottles Usually Green?

Most wine bottles are green. Is it because they're pretty? Or do they protect the booze juice inside somehow? Learn more at HowStuffWorks.com: http://science.howstuffworks.com/innovation/edible-innovations/winemaking.htm Share on Facebook: Share on Twitter: Subscribe: http://goo.gl/ZYI

From playlist Stuff About Food

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How are Glass Bottles Made?

SUPPORT CR on PATREON: http://bit.ly/2qBHcvf Chances are you've used a glass bottle just today – you could even be sipping out of one right now. While the modern glass bottle may seem boring and rather simple, they actually represent centuries of innovation in manufacturing and production

From playlist Concerning Engineering

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Out of the Bottle: Wine Flavor

http://www.sciencefriday.com Produced by Luke Groskin. Wine and location provided by Corkbuzz. Music by Audio Network Additional photos and footage provided by Finger Lakes Wine Program/James Monahan, Shutterstock, Patricia Lynch, Tom Mack, Christina Sookdhis, Bodegas Delea a Marca, and Gi

From playlist Out of the Bottle: Wine Science

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The Science Behind Wine

Episode 2 of 5 Check us out on iTunes! http://dne.ws/1NixUds Please Subscribe! http://testu.be/1FjtHn5 There is a huge variety of alcoholic beverages made from fermenting sweet liquids but none of their complexities come close to wine’s. + + + + + + + + Previous Episode:

From playlist Using Science To Understand Wine

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Out of the Bottle: Wine Tricks of the Trade

http://www.sciencefriday.com Produced by Luke Groskin Wine and location provided byCorkbuzz Music by Audio Network. Additional photos and footage provided by Shutterstock by Shutterstock, Juan Carlos, Institute Andaluz del Patrimon Historico Actors - Christopher Intagliata, Leese Katsnels

From playlist Out of the Bottle: Wine Science

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Art Quiz #74 - not easy

Not Easy

From playlist Art Quizzes

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How to make Bottle Rocket!

In this video i build a water pressure rocket using a two liter plastic bottle. The water rocket flies very high and the video contains the rocket designs.

From playlist MECHANICS

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What's The Best Shape For A Champagne Glass?

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International Relations 101 (#28): Comparative Advantage and Trade

http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ If states can make some products but not others, trade inherently makes sense. But what if a single state is better at making everything? Is trade still sensible? Surprisingly, it is. States can still specialize in what they ar

From playlist William Spaniel: International Relations 101

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International Relations 101 (#27): Absolute Advantage and Trade

http://gametheory101.com/courses/international-relations-101/ Why do states engage in trade? One reason might be because some states are just better at producing goods than other states. This lecture uses the California wine and Mexican tequila industries as an example. California has a g

From playlist William Spaniel: International Relations 101

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International Relations 101 (#29): Trade Rivalry

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From playlist William Spaniel: International Relations 101

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Champagne: Science, History, and Everyday Sipping | FoodStuff

Champagne wasn't always a symbol of celebration -- it started as an explosive mistake that French winemakers tried to prevent. Anney and Lauren explore sparkling wine's history with a master sabreur (i.e., a professional at breaking bottles open with swords) and visit a winery to see how i

From playlist FoodStuff

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Can You Solve the Poison Wine Challenge? | Infinite Series | PBS Digital

Viewers like you help make PBS (Thank you 😃) . Support your local PBS Member Station here: https://to.pbs.org/donateinfi You’re about to throw a party with a thousand bottles of wine, but you just discovered that one bottle is poisoned! Can you determine exactly which one it is? Tweet at

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Price discrimination | Microeconomics | Khan Academy

If a seller has enough market power, it can charge different buyers different prices based on their willingness to pay. Watch the next lesson: https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/microeconomics/perfect-competition-topic/perfect-competition/v/perfect-competition?utm_source

From playlist Production and costs | AP Microeconomics | Khan Academy

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THE POISONED WINE BOTTLE PUZZLE

THE POISONED WINE BOTTLE PUZZLE: One wine bottle out of 1000 contains deadly poison. How do we test the wine on 10 subjects who must be all tested a the same time? [Correction: 0:52 should be "about" 24 hours. Can you think of a different solution for "exactly"?]

From playlist Famous Math Problems

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THE BASICS: The Ellipse-its everywhere

Marc discusses and demonstrates the why and how of the ellipse in drawing, theoretically, and in practice from still life and a human hand. Set to 1440 or higher.

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Who Really Invented Champagne? - Objectivity 129

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Amazing Magic Bottle, Revealed!

Impress your family and friends with this trick! Watch to learn how it's done! Very simple! Fun for kids!

From playlist How to videos!

Related pages

Apothecaries' system | United States customary units | Litre | Ton | Fifth (unit)