There are 0.1 L in 100 mL of water.
To convert from mL to L, divide by 1000.
Yes, 2000 milliliters is equal to 2 liters of any liquid.
2.95 liters of any gas, liquid, or empty space = 2,950milliliters of the same substance
You don't convert any meters to milliliters. Meters to millimeters, liters to milliliters. Either way, multiply by 1000. 112 m = 112000 mm
Liters and any denomination of liters are a unit of volume. The definition of matter includes that it has to take up space - volume. So you can indeed use liters and milliliters to measure the volume of a solid. However, the alternative is to use meters (cubed) and any denomination of meters to represent volume. You could say that something is 1.00 liters or you could say that the same thing is 1000 cm3.
0.09 liters are equivalent to 90 milliliters. There are 1000 milliliters in one liter. To find the answer to your question, divide 90 ml by 1000. Divide any number of milliliters by one thousand to convert milliliters into liters.
You can convert everything to liters, or everything to milliliters, then multiply. But in any case, multiplying this doesn't make any sort of sense, as far as I know - you would get (for example) square liters, equivalent to decimeters to the sixth power.
1 dry pint is 550ml, so just over 1/2 liter.
milliliter are a small measurement of any type of liquid measured using a metric system eg liuid medicines are often measures in milliliters. 10 milliliters (ml) = 1 centiliter (cl) 10 centiliters = 1 deciliter (dl) = 100 milliliters 10 deciliters = 1 liter (l) = 1,000 milliliters 10 liters = 1 dekaliter (dal) 10 dekaliters = 1hectoliter (hl) = 100 liters 10 hectoliters = 1 kiloliter (kl) = 1,000 liters RB
Any unit of volume, such as liters, milliliters, gallons, pints, or quarts.
1 cubic meter = 1 000 liters (of water or any other liquid)
None, since there can be no conversion.A millimetre is a measure of length in 1-dimensional space while a litre is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space. The two measure different characteristics and, according to the most basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at comparisons or conversions between the two are fundamentally flawed.
Millilitres are units of volume and grams are units of mass or weight. They cannot be converted into each other.