+37 Saying you drank 2 pounds of water sounds way more impressive than saying you drank a liter of water. amirite?

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Drinking 2 ponds of water will probably lead to dysentery.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Never gonna get to Oregon like this :(

by Life-Big-4357 1 week ago

spontaneous combustion

by Many_Part 1 week ago

Reminds me of when Tracy Jordan is asked by frat boys if he's ever drank a yard of beer, and he says "like a lawn? Yes I have"

by bradly13 1 week ago

I will be doing this from now on 8lbs a day

by Beginning-Seesaw2880 1 week ago

I still do that on days I work out. It's pee all day.

by rahsaanglover 1 week ago

Love this, me too

by Halie47 1 week ago

Yeah man that does sound more impressive. I drink 2lbs of water before I leave the house in the morning. I am a god among men.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Nah American. Beverages are very often sold in liters

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Why does my Coca Cola say 1/10 ground bald eagle?

by Anonymous 1 week ago

AFAIK, US has obligatory liter markings on beverages.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Canadians spell it the proper way "litre". :)

by Anonymous 1 week ago

We just use the standard SI spelling (which the rest of the world uses) instead of the US ones. Which makes sense since we are a metric country.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

They drained 16# of water from my abdominal cavity today.

by VegetableTear 1 week ago

Cirrhosis?

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Yes, shunt Thursday.

by VegetableTear 1 week ago

Thirsty Thursday

by darionbernier 1 week ago

A pint's a pound the world around. Technically a liter is 2.2 lbs (1kg) not 2 lbs.

by Dull_Position_6713 1 week ago

What about if you accidentally drank 3 liters of water, and a slice of apple, and a shawarma with extra tahini?

by DuckNo4507 1 week ago

How much is that in Ariana Grandes?

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Probably 2 is twice as much as 1???

by Artistic_Guide_8446 1 week ago

concerning!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!???????????????

by CrySweet 1 week ago

big if true

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Twice as big, in fact

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Yeah, 1 liter = 1 kilo, I'm not trying to make this too complicated though. It's 2.2 pounds though, so every 5 liters would be 11 pounds. Or 5 kilos. Whichever one is easier for you to remember.

by olsonleanna 1 week ago

With metric system in use, the effect is opposite.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

A liter? I just did a whole key, bro

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Talk about pounding your drink.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Then drink 2 liters of water. 👍🏻

by Anonymous 1 week ago

I drink 12.675lbs of water sometimes. Usually with 4lbs of other liquids too.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Is it just me or is there not really any difference from the way they sound?

by Slight-Sugar 1 week ago

"Yeah, lemme get 2 pounds of cola"

by Anonymous 1 week ago

That much sounds dangerous, honestly

by Rowenajacobson 1 week ago

being an American and using metric is more impressive than either

by One_Management2057 1 week ago

It would be, if the conversion was correct

by Willing-Stable 1 week ago

It doesn't make sense though. But if you like it, I love it.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

I kinda forgot how heavy water is 1L of water weighs 1kg and takes up exactly 1,000 cm³, meaning it fills the volume of a cube of 10x10x10cm entirely.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Water doesn't necessarily fill the volume of a perfect cube measuring 10x10x10cm entirely. This assumption overlooks factors such as the slight expansion of water at certain temperatures and the shape of the container it's held in.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

If you're going from volume to weight starting from liters just go straight to kilograms. Because it's effing EASY! You drank a liter? Ok, whatever. But one liter of water is also… wait for it… one kilogram!

by Anonymous 1 week ago

2 pounds of water is less than a litter tho, I would say "I drank one kilogram of water" sounds like a larger quantity than "I drank a liter of water".

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Depends what planet you're on

by Anonymous 1 week ago

The density of water (kg/L) will be different depending on temperature and atmospheric pressure. 1 kg/L is a density in specific "normal" conditions.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

I understand

by Anonymous 1 week ago

"I drank one kilogram of water" sounds like a larger quantity than "I drank a liter of water". It is. 1 kg = 1L is applicable to water at 4 °C (near freezing). At the above temperatures 1 kg of water takes slightly more volume than 1 L due to thermal expansion.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

2.2lbs. If only a litre of water had a given set weight that was easy to calculate.

by PlayAdvanced 1 week ago

It does. It's called '1 litre' 😂

by guyhuels 1 week ago