The gill or teacup is a unit of measurement for volume equal to a quarter of a pint.[1] It is no longer in common use, except in regard to the volume of alcoholic spirits measures. In United States customary units A US capacity unit (liquid or dry) equal to 4 fluid ounces.
The SI derived unit for volume is a cubic meter.1 cubic meter is equal to 8453.506 US Gills.
| Standard Units | |
|---|---|
| Centiliters | {{ cL }} |
| Cubic Centimeters | {{ cm3 }} |
| Cubic Feet | {{ ft3 }} |
| Cubic Inches | {{ in3 }} |
| Cubic Meter | {{ m3 }} |
| Cubic Millimeters | {{ mm3 }} |
| Cubic Yards | {{ yard3 }} |
| Kiloliter | {{ kL }} |
| Liters | {{ L }} |
| Microliter | {{ microliter }} |
| Milliliter | {{ mL }} |
| International Cooking Standard | |
|---|---|
| Metric Cup | {{ metric_cup }} |
| Metric Tablespoon | {{ metric_tlbsp }} |
| Metric Teaspoon | {{ metric_tsp }} |
| U.S. Cooking Standard | |
|---|---|
| US Cup | {{ US_cup }} |
| US Tablespoon | {{ US_tlbsp }} |
| US Teaspoon | {{ US_tsp }} |
| U.S. Dry And Liquid Measurement | |
|---|---|
| US Barrels Dry | {{ US_bbl_dry }} |
| US Barrels Federal | {{ US_bbl_fed }} |
| US Barrels Liquid | {{ US_bbl_lq }} |
| US Barrels Oil | {{ US_bbl_oil }} |
| US Fluid Ounces | {{ US_fl_oz }} |
| US Gallons Dry | {{ US_gal_dry }} |
| US Gallons Liquid | {{ US_gal_lq }} |
| US Pints Dry | {{ US_pt_dry }} |
| US Pints Liquid | {{ US_pt_lq }} |
| US Quarts | {{ US_qt }} |
| US Quarts Dry | {{ US_qt_dry }} |
| British Imperial Liquid And Dry | |
|---|---|
| UK Barrels | {{ UK_bbl }} |
| UK Fluid Ounces | {{ UK_fl_oz }} |
| UK Gallons | {{ UK_gal }} |
| UK Gills | {{ UK_gills }} |
| UK Pints | {{ UK_pt }} |
| UK Quarts | {{ UK_qt }} |
| UK Tablespoon | {{ UK_tlbsp }} |
| UK Teaspoon | {{ UK_tsp }} |