6 Grams
If you have pure water, standard temperature, and standard pressure,then 100 milliliters of water has 100 grams of mass.(Note: 'milliliters', not 'millimeters'.)
325mL of plain water has a mass of 0.72 pounds at sea level.
355 grams. A cubic centimeter of water has a mass of 1 gram.
The mass of 75 milliliters of water is approximately 75 grams, as the density of water is close to 1 gram per milliliter.
The conversion of milliliters to grams depends on the density of the substance. For water, 180 milliliters is equivalent to 180 grams, as 1 milliliter of water weighs 1 gram.
The conversion of grams to milliliters depends on the density of the substance. For water, 6 grams is approximately equal to 6 milliliters because the density of water is close to 1 g/ml. For other substances, you would need to know the density to make an accurate conversion.
No, 250 grams of water is a measure of mass (weight) while 250 milliliters of water is a measure of volume. The weight of water will vary depending on the temperature and pressure, but 250 milliliters of water will always have a volume of 250 milliliters regardless of external conditions.
Milliliters can't be converted to grams. Milliliters measure volume, while grams measure mass.
Float
Milliliters is volume and grams is mass, so you need to know mass density to solve this. For water, it has mass density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter which is the same as 1 gram per millitre of volume. So for water only, 20 ml = 20 grams.
milliliters is volume, milligrams is mass (weight) unless you include the density, the question is meaningless. (if it's water ... then 80 ml)
This is not a valid conversion; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume. However, 6ml of water, at just above freezing, will have a mass of 6mg (and a volume of 6 cubic centimeters).