Yes, though it is not easy to think of a situation where it would be useful.
Once again friend Des Dichado is correct. Though volume is a derived unit it cannot be derived right from mass. So no relation to get milliliter from gram
A milliliter (ml) is a derived metric measurement unit of volume.
A gram is a unit of mass. The international (SI) unit of mass is the kilogram; so of course, a gram is 1/1000 of a kilogram.
Milligrams versus millilitersOne milliliter of water weighs one gram. There are 1000 milligrams in one gram.One milliliter of other substances will weigh more or less, depending upon their densities. A millilter of gasoline, for example, weighs less, and a milliliter of mercury weighs more -- WAY more. (No pun intended.)Milligram is a unit of mass; milliliter is a unit of volume. You can't directly convert the two. If you know the density of a substance, you can say, for example, "1 milliliter of water has a mass of 1 gram (1000 milligrams)", or "1 milliliter of lead has a mass of about 11 gram".
grams Correction: The gram is a unit of mass, not weight. The kilogram, not the gram, is the base unit of mass. The SI unit for weight is the newton, but it's a derived unit calculated using mass and gravitational pull.
Gram is a unit of mass and milliliter is a unit of volume.
no. ml is volume unit. gram is a mass unit.
Once again friend Des Dichado is correct. Though volume is a derived unit it cannot be derived right from mass. So no relation to get milliliter from gram
no its not. gram = unit of mass. milliliter= unit of volume. entirely different measures
"ml" stands for 'milliliter' ... a unit of volume, capacity, space. "gram" is a unit of mass.
Ml is a unit of capacity, gram is a unit of mass. They don't equate.
Sine a milliliter is a unit of volume, and a gram is a unit of mass, you can't convert that - except for specific substances, if you know the density (mass/volume) for the substance.
yes,grams per millimeter a derived unit .it is called linear density,that is ,gram /mL
A milliliter (ml) is a derived metric measurement unit of volume.
Neither. A gram is simply a submultiple of a kilogram, which is the SI base unit for mass.
Such a unit is often derived from the unit of length, which is cubed. For example, in the SI, the official unit is the cubic meter; derived units include the cubic decimeter (a.k.a. the liter), and the cubic centimeter (a.k.a. the milliliter).
A millilitre is a unit of capacity. A gram is a unit of mass. Without some unit of density to compare, the two units are incompatible.