When you are cooking or baking you need to measure out ingredients. Solid ingredients such as rice, pasta or vegetables can be weighed on kitchen scales. When you measure liquid ingredients such as milk, oil or water you will need to use a measuring jug.
If you want the perfect pancakes, you need to measure the correct amount of milk!
$1$. For each of these jugs write down:
a. the capacity of the jug
b. the volume of water in the jug

a. Capacity is the maximum value shown on each jug scale.
b. Volume is the level where the water reaches on the scale.
$2$. Read what Sofia says.
a. Explain why Sofia is correct.
b. Use Sofia’s example to help you copy and complete this table.
| millilitres | litres and millilitres | litres |
|---|---|---|
| $2500\ \text{ml}$ | $2\ 500\ \text{ml}$ | $2.5\ \text{l}$ |
| $3200\ \text{ml}$ | ||
| $4\ 300\ \text{ml}$ | ||
| $3.7\ \text{l}$ | ||
| $0\ 800\ \text{ml}$ | ||
| $12\ 100\ \text{ml}$ |
a. Sofia is correct because $1\ \text{litre} = 1000\ \text{ml}$. Therefore $2500\ \text{ml} = 2.5\ \text{litres}$.
b.
Question: Marcus and Arun are looking at this question. What is the volume of water in this jug?

What they say:
Follow-up Questions:
$3$. For each of these jugs write down:
a. the capacity of the jug
b. the volume of water in the jug

a. Capacity is the largest value shown on each jug scale.
b. Volume is the level where the water reaches on the scale.
$4$. What volume of water must be added to these jugs to fill them to capacity?

Subtract the volume shown from the capacity of each jug to find the amount of water needed.
$5$. Chipo needs to measure out $2.3$ litres of milk.
She only has the measuring jug shown.Explain how she can use this measuring jug to measure out $2.3$ litres of milk.

$2.3$ litres equals $2300$ ml. She can fill the $500$ ml jug four times to get $2000$ ml and then add another $300$ ml.
$6$. Vishan buys a fish tank with a capacity of $120$ litres.
He pours water into the tank until it is $\dfrac{3}{4}$ full.
What is the volume of the water in the tank?
$\dfrac{3}{4} \times 120 = 90$. The volume of water in the tank is $90$ litres.
Mair has four measuring cups A, B, C and D. The capacity of each cup, in millilitres, is shown.

Question: How can the cups be used to measure the following volumes?
$7$. Each of the containers below is marked with its capacity. Estimate the volume of liquid in each container.
Order the volumes of liquid from the least to the greatest.


Estimate the fraction of each container that is full and multiply by its capacity.
An example ordering from least to greatest may be:
$B < D < A < E < C < F$
$8$. Copy and complete the Carroll diagram to sort the containers by their capacity and the volume of liquid they contain.

| Volume of $500\ \text{ml}$ or less | Volume of more than $500\ \text{ml}$ | |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity of $1$ litre or less | $C,\ E$ | $A$ |
| Capacity of more than $1$ litre | $B$ | $D,\ F$ |
First determine the capacity of each container. Then read the scale to estimate the amount of liquid inside. Finally place each container in the correct part of the Carroll diagram based on both properties.
Investigation: Investigate what amounts you can make with jug A that has a capacity of $3$ litres and jug B that has a capacity of $4$ litres, when neither jug has a measurement scale.

It is possible to measure a volume of any whole number of litres from $1$ to $7$ with the two jugs by filling a whole jug, pouring water from one jug to the other or emptying a jug.
Tasks: