C
Camila [:
Guest
I've done this in science a few times, so now I want to see if anyone else can get it.
It's not that hard, and I'm just doing this for fun[:
The first one to get the answer gets 10 points!
You have a two pitchers. One holds exactly five cups of water, and the other one holds exactly three cups. Neither of them have any markings. Using these two pitchers, how can you measure exactly one cup?
You can't say "do this and then take half out" or anything. It must be exact.
This one got me thinking, and once you get the answer, it seems quite simple.
If you've done this before don't ruin it for others!
Only answer if you've never done it!
Have fun!

It's not that hard, and I'm just doing this for fun[:
The first one to get the answer gets 10 points!
You have a two pitchers. One holds exactly five cups of water, and the other one holds exactly three cups. Neither of them have any markings. Using these two pitchers, how can you measure exactly one cup?
You can't say "do this and then take half out" or anything. It must be exact.
This one got me thinking, and once you get the answer, it seems quite simple.
If you've done this before don't ruin it for others!
Only answer if you've never done it!
Have fun!
