The standard measure for dry goods is the ephah. The same measure, when used for liquids, is called a bath.
There is uncertainty about the size of an ephah/bath. Broken jar handles have been found stamped "bath of the royal standard." Unfortunately not enough pieces of any such jars have been found to reconstruct the jar to give us a full measure of its capacity. Most scholars estimate it to be about 22 liters.
10 omers make 1 ephah; 10 ephah make 1 homer. A seah is about a third of an ephah.
The hin—probably an Egyptian loan word—is a liquid measure; according to post-biblical sources, 6 hins make a bath.
©ALBERITH