subject

Capacity

Math

Capacity starts at 1 and continues till grade 5. QuestionsToday has an evolving set of questions to continuously challenge students so that their knowledge grows in Capacity. How you perform is determined by your score and the time you take. When you play a quiz, your answers are evaluated in concept instead of actual words and definitions used.
See sample questions for grade 4
A bottle contains 1.5 liters of water. How many 250 milliliter cups can you fill?
A bottle contains 750 milliliters of water. How much more is needed to make 1 liter?
A bottle holds 1,200 milliliters of water. How many liters is this?
A bottle holds 2 liters. If you pour 250 milliliters into each glass, how many glasses can you fill?
A container holds 2.5 liters of milk. How many milliliters is this?
A container holds 3.5 liters of juice. How many milliliters is this?
A family uses 15 liters of water every day. How many milliliters is this?
If a jug contains 3 liters of juice and you pour out 1 liter, how much juice is left in the jug?
Which is the best unit to measure the capacity of a large water tank? (1) milliliters (2) liters (3) kiloliters (4) centiliters
Which is the best unit to measure the capacity of a medicine dropper? (1) liters (2) milliliters (3) kiloliters (4) centiliters
Which of the following containers would most likely hold about 2 liters? (1) A teacup (2) A large soda bottle (3) A swimming pool (4) A spoon
Which of the following is NOT a unit of capacity? (1) liter (2) milliliter (3) kilogram (4) kiloliter
Fill in the blank: 0.75 liters = _______ milliliters.
Fill in the blank: 1 liter = _______ centiliters.
Fill in the blank: 1,500 milliliters = _______ liters and _______ milliliters.
Fill in the blank: 2 liters + 2,500 milliliters = _______ milliliters.
True or False: 1 centiliter is equal to 10 milliliters.
True or False: 1 kiloliter is equal to 1,000 liters.
True or False: 1 liter is equal to 1,000 milliliters.
True or False: 1 liter is more than 1,000 milliliters.