Yes it is, a dl is 1/10th of a litre and a ml is 1/1000th of a litre
And since 2/10th is equal to 200/1000 then 2dL must be 200mL
1000 mL = 1 L10 dl = 1 LTherefore 200 mL is 0.2 L, which is 2 deciliters.
> 1 dl = 125 ml, so 3 dl = 375 ml ( about 2 cups) not quite, in fact, 1 dl = 100 ml, so 3 dl is 300 ml. The "d" in dl stands for "deci" which is "the tenth part", in this case, of a liter. It breaks down like this: 1000 milliliters = 100 centiliters = 10 deciliters = 1 liter.
There are 100 mL in 1 dL. Therefore in 20 dL, there are 2000 mL or 20*100. The answer is 2000 mL.
There are 100 ml in one dl, because mili comes from "mil" which is a thousand and deci comes from "dez," from the decimal system, which takes 10 as basic measurement. Therefore 3dl equals 300 ml.
dl (or dL) is the symbol of decilitre; 1 dL=100 mL.
9.83*102 dL = 983 dL = 98300 mL = 98300 cm3
1 nanogram (ng) = 0.001 microgram (ug). 1 milliliter (mL) = 0.01 deciliter (dL) (ng / mL) * (ug / ng) * (mL / dL) = ug / dL Therefore, 1 ng / mL = (1 ng / mL) * (0.001 ug / ng) * (mL / 0.01 dL) = 0.1 ug / dL
That is 200 ml.
2 L is greater than 200 mL.2 L = 2000 mL > 2 mL
dL x 100 = mL: 26.7dL = 26.7 x 100 = 2670mL
There are 100mL per deciliter. So, divide mL by 100 to get dL.
1 qt = 2 pt 1 imp pt ≈ 568 ml → 1 qt ≈ 2 × 568 ml = 1136 ml > 200 ml → yes 1 us pt ≈ 473 ml → 1 qt ≈ 2 × 473 ml = 946 ml > 200 ml → yes Yes; whichever quart you are using 200 ml will fit in it.