No. Just the opposite. 'mg' are a lot smaller than 'g', so to make the same amount,
you'd expect to have a lot more 'mg' and a lot less 'g'.
That means . . .
-- If you have some 'mg', then divide by 1,000 to get 'g' .
-- If you have some 'g', then multiply by 1,000 to get 'mg' .
(1 g is made of 1,000 mg.
1 mg is only 0.001 g .)
1 g = 1000 mg, so multiply by 1000 to get 5.6 g = 5600 mg.
I mg is 1/1000th of a g. Multiply .6 by 1000 to get how many mg it is.
Multiply by 1000
to convert 1.5 g to mg, multiply 1.5 g by 1000 mg to get 1500 mg
1 g = 1000 mg1 g = 1000 mg1 g = 1000 mg1 g = 1000 mg1 g = 1000 mg1 g = 1000 mg
1 g = 1000 mg, so multiply by 1000 to get 5.6 g = 5600 mg.
I mg is 1/1000th of a g. Multiply .6 by 1000 to get how many mg it is.
Multiply by 1000
to convert 1.5 g to mg, multiply 1.5 g by 1000 mg to get 1500 mg
Multiply by 1000 or divide by 0.001
0.5 g = 500 mg, and 2.5 g = 2500 mg. The prefix milli- means the unit is 1/1000 of the base unit, so there are 1000 mg in 1 g.For example, multiply (0.5 g) x (1000 mg/g) = 500 mg.
27 g = 27 000 mgTo convert from g to mg, multiply by 1000.
8.548 grams. Multiply 8548 mg x (1000 mg/g)
Multiply by 1000. So 440 * 1000 = 440000 miligrams.
Since 1g 1000 mg, and percentage is g per 100g, you have to multiply by 10.
Multiply it with one thousand. 0.5*1000=500 500 mg
There are 1000 mg in 1 g; therefore there would be 65,000 mg in 65 g