No. A deciliter is 1/10th of a liter, so 902.3 dl = 90.23 l
Meters and liters aren't going to equal each other no matter how many of them there are. 100 dm (or dl) = 10 m (or L) 1000 L (or m) = 10,000 dl (or dm)
There is 10 DL in 1 L.
The deci- (d) prefix means one tenth (1/10 = 0.1) → 1 dl = 0.1 l → 10 × 1 dl = 10 × 0.1 l = 1 l → there are 10 decilitres in 1 litre.
80 dL = 8L
73
An L has 10 dL so 50dL is equal to 5L. L stands for liters and dL stands for deciliters.
10 dl = 1 litre so 240 dl = 240/10 l = 24 litres.
29.8 mmol/L= mg/dL
Meters and liters aren't going to equal each other no matter how many of them there are. 100 dm (or dl) = 10 m (or L) 1000 L (or m) = 10,000 dl (or dm)
There is 10 DL in 1 L.
750 dL = 75 L
1 liter (L) equals 10 deciliter (DL)
You would need about 10dl to equal 1 liter. Since dl= 1/10, (1-dl) would just be 1 out of the 10 that would be needed to make 1 liter.
10 dL = 1 L 2 L = 20 L +5 ANSWER: 2.5 L = 25 dL P.S. I might be wrong so I would check it over if I were you!
The deci- (d) prefix means one tenth (1/10 = 0.1) → 1 dl = 0.1 l → 10 × 1 dl = 10 × 0.1 l = 1 l → there are 10 decilitres in 1 litre.
The deci- prefix means one tenth (1/10 = 0.1) → 100 dl = 100 × 0.1 l = 10 l There are 10 l in 100 dl.
10 dL = 1 L