Level 3
Gerald bought bottles of apple juice, orange juice and lemon juice of 250 mℓ, 300 mℓ and 500 mℓ respectively. He counted to pour them into smaller cups of equal amount with no leftover.
  1. What was the largest possible amount of juice in each cup?
  2. How many cups of juice of apple juice, orange juice and lemon juice would he have respectively?
4 m
Level 2
A pitcher contained some ice tea. After Leslie had poured 350 mℓ of the ice tea into a glass, the pitcher still contained 250 mℓ more ice tea than the glass. How many millilitres of ice tea contain at first?
4 m
Level 2
A food stall used 50 ℓ of water on Monday and 12 ℓ more water on Tuesday than on Monday. How many ℓ of water did the class use on the two days?
4 m
Level 2
A jar has 650 mℓ of water. A pitcher has 280 mℓ of water. How much more water must be added into the pitcher so that it has the same amount of water as the jar?
4 m
Level 2
Beaker A has 300 mℓ of water and Beaker B has 900 mℓ of water. How much water must be added into Beaker A so that it has the same volume as Beaker B?
4 m
Level 3
A water jug can hold 28 ℓ of water. A pitcher can hold 4 ℓ of water. How many pitchers of water are needed to fill up 4 water jugs completely?
4 m
Level 3
There are 84 ℓ of water in a tank. Jake used 4 ℓ of water from the tank every day. How many litres of water are left after a week?
4 m
Level 2
Mrs Lim bought three bottles of orange juice. Each bottle is 2 ℓ. Her family drank 3 ℓ of the orange juice. What is the volume of orange juice left?
4 m
Level 3
Study the picture.
  1. What container contains the most amount of water?
  2. How many more bottles does the pail contain than the pitcher?
  3. If each bottle contains 2 ℓ, how many litres does the pail has?
  4. How many ℓ does the pail and pitcher have?
4 m
Level 3
Beaker A has a capacity of 450 mℓ. Beaker B has a capacity that is 250 mℓ more than that of Beaker A but 150 mℓ less than Beaker C. Find the capacity of Beaker C.
4 m