As previously mentioned it means that the weight / volume is subject to standard deviation. If I recall correctly, most products have a tolerance of 5%. This means a 100g chocolate bar could be anywhere from 95g to 105g. For a machine to create chocolate bars of exactly 100g would be wasteful as so many would fail and be rejected. The 'e' allows a margin of error that is acceptable within the EU.Wot does the e stand for after a quantity of ml eg. on shampoo bottle or talc? 500ml ';e';?
I do not exactly what it stands for, but it repsents an accepted standard deviation of 500ml. That is to say, it will not have EXACTLY 500ml, but on average, the contents of several bottles will be 500ml, and within a small percentage difference.Wot does the e stand for after a quantity of ml eg. on shampoo bottle or talc? 500ml ';e';?
The e stands for equivalent to
I believe it's the international symbol for 'estimated' so they don't legally have to get the weight volume exact.
';e'; indicates the actual volume of product , as you said 500 ml 'e'. Further you must have noticed 800 ml, mentioned next to it , in a rectangle box, This indicated actual volume of the bottle, aerosol can, container. .
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