A mile
Question needs clarification
A liter is a unit of the metric system for volume (how much space an object occupies). The prefix "milli" means one thousandth. If you take one liter and divide it by a thousand, you end up with a milliliter. An American teaspoon contains about five milliliters - so milliliter represents a really small amount. If that reference is not helpful, imagine taking a tiny sip of water. This is approximately a milliliter.
1 gram is equal to 0.001 kilograms in the metric system.
It is an international standard, and it is much easier to calculate with the metric system.
10g is equivalent to 0.01 kilograms in the metric system.
A square meter in the metric system is equal to the area of a square that measures one meter on each side. It is the primary unit of area measurement in the metric system.
If it's water, then it's 1 gr since water's density is 1 gr/ml. For anything else you need the density since grams are a weight metric while milliliter is a volume metric ... it would be like asking how many pounds in a gallon.
Metric. Pro-tip: If you can add mili- centi- deci- to the front... its metric. ++++ Not sure that's much of a tip. The prefixes are simply divisions, but it is true that they are used normally only for metric units. However, the litre is indeed part of the metric system: it is the basic unit of fluid volume.
In the US metric system, a kilometer is equivalent to 0.6214 miles.
That depends how much zinc you have.
Scientists have concluded after decades of deliberation, research, and calculation, that approximately 7.2547 feet is in the metric system.
"Milli" is a prefix that means one thousandth, so a milliliter (mL) is equal to one thousandth of a liter, and a millimeter (mm) is equal to one thousandth of a meter. It is commonly used in measurements in the metric system.