Fill the 3-liter glass again, and slowly pour the water into the 5-liter glass until it is full. At this time, the remaining water in the 3-liter cup is 1 liter.
Pour out all the water in the 5-liter glass, and pour the remaining 1 liter water in the 3-liter glass into the 5-liter glass. Fill the 3-liter water cup again and pour the water from the 3-liter water cup into the 5-liter water cup. At this time, add 1 liter of water obtained in step 6, and there are 4 liters of water in the 5-liter cup.
Units refer to organs, organizations or departments subordinate to organs and organizations; Refers to the name of the standard quantity for measuring things in mathematics or physics. Generally, there are: meters (m), kilometers (km), cattle (ton) n, pa (ska) pa and other units.
In the traditional sense of Buddhism, units refer to quantitative units such as length, quality and time. And there are special terms such as: moment, moment, snap of fingers, moment and so on. Accurately speaking, a unit is a group of a certain amount of substances defined as "1" to become a unit.
Broadly speaking, unit is a relative concept and an abstract concept, which can form an individual on the coordinate axis of the object coordinate system. The smallest unit of things is zero.
Organs, organizations, institutions, enterprises and other unnatural entities or their subordinate departments. 1989 Suixian Chronicles, Culture and Ancient Buildings: Yuan Jiashan (Bie Ye, Yuan Keli), now the former site of the county library and the key cultural relics protection unit of the county.
A place where working-class people go to work, or a specific place where people get their own survival needs and participate in social labor to support their families.
A standard quantity used for comparison when measuring physical quantities.
Seating originally refers to the seating for monks to meditate in the Buddhist Zen forest monk's hall. "Repairing a hundred feet and clearing the rules-a daily code": "If you are in a daze, you must go back to your unit first." The latter refers to the standard for calculating the number of things, also known as taking the work department as the unit.