Liquid unit · mL

standard wine bottle (750 mL)

A matrix-backed working definition with its historical limits attached.

What this unit was

standard wine bottle (750 mL) is modelled here as a liquid standard of the Modern packaged alcohol tradition, associated with International during Current common and specified package size. The converter represents one mL as 0.75 L; its basis is defined-package-volume. This is a defined or exact matrix anchor.

Its present role is chiefly comparative: it provides a stable reference for storage, rations, trade, and the circulation of drink or other commodities, rather than evidence that earlier cultures used a modern definition. A vessel name is not automatically the capacity of every surviving vessel.

Evidence of use and sources

The working value is traceable to GOV.UK specified alcohol quantities. Its record is classified as exact confidence and uses the stated basis rather than an assumed culture-wide constant.

The local library supplies contextual quotations; the linked record source remains authoritative for the modern definition.

“the ten millionth of the meridian quadrant ... be called a metre”

Standard measures of United States, Great Britain, and France, PDF p. 16. metric origin proposal

“A standard is a physical representation of a unit.”

A dictionary of weights and measures for the British Isles, PDF p. 31. standard versus unit

“the omission of necessary facts”

Standard measures of United States, Great Britain, and France, PDF p. 10. conditions required for comparison

Working definition

standard wine bottle (750 mL) is represented as a Modern packaged alcohol standard associated with International during Current common and specified package size.

The converter uses 0.75 L per unit.

How to use it

Basis: defined-package-volume; confidence: exact. A shared historical name does not make this value portable to another period or polity.

Open this unit in the Liquid converter · Return to all units

Source

GOV.UK specified alcohol quantities