grams
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
Note: Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight.A small bag of sugar, salt, or flour might have a mass of 1-2 kilogram; a small jar of water will also have a mass of about 1 kilogram.Note: Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight.A small bag of sugar, salt, or flour might have a mass of 1-2 kilogram; a small jar of water will also have a mass of about 1 kilogram.Note: Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight.A small bag of sugar, salt, or flour might have a mass of 1-2 kilogram; a small jar of water will also have a mass of about 1 kilogram.Note: Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight.A small bag of sugar, salt, or flour might have a mass of 1-2 kilogram; a small jar of water will also have a mass of about 1 kilogram.
There are 2300 milligrams in one teaspoon of table salt
Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of length.Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of length.Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of length.Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of length.
Grams.
4.2 ----------------------------------------------------- The US teaspoon as a unit of volume has approx. 5 mL. After "Bulk density chart" the density of fine table salt is 1,378 g/cm3. So the mass of table salt in a teaspoon is 6,8 g.
tsp
400 mg is about 1/12 of a teaspoon. ------------------------------------------------- You can not equate a unit of volume (the teaspoon) with a unit of mass (the mg) because it depends on what you are measuring (its density).
Milligrams can't be converted to teaspoons. Milligrams measure mass, while teaspoons measure volume.
A teaspoon is a unit of capacity. A gram is a unit of mass. Without some unit of density to convert, the two units are incompatible.
A teaspoon is a unit of volume. MG (megagram) or mg (milligram) are unit of mass.
It depends on the substance. A gram is a unit of mass, a teaspoon is a unit of volume.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
Since table salt is the stuff you can see and measure, it is useful to know that one teaspoon of table salt weighs about 6 g, or 6,000 mg. There are about 2.4 g sodium in one teaspoon salt. * this is from http://www.ultracycling.com/nutrition/hyponatremia2.html
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
It depends The answer is "it depends." If we don't know what the teaspoon is holding, then we can't answer the question. That's because a milligram is a unit of WEIGHT, whereas a teaspoon is a unit of volume. So what? you ask. Well, a teaspoon of black pepper will not weigh the same as a teaspoon of iron filings, which will have a different weight than a teaspoon of sugar, which will have a different weight than a teaspoon of tungsten filings or liquid Mercury. Do not confuse WEIGHT with VOLUME. For example, a level teaspoon of table salt has (weighs) about 2300 milligrams. FYI, the recommended daily allowance (RDA) is 2400 milligrams. And average consumption in the USA is 3500 milligrams. Drop the dill pickle and back away! There are 10 milligrams in one teaspoon. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- The teaspoon as a volume unit has 5 mL. Mass = volume x density; density is a specific characteristic of any material. So the mass contained in a teaspoon depends on the density.