A litre. Unless you wanted to be particularly precise, in which case millilitre.
A measuring cup. ------------- ------3-------- ------2----- - -----1-------- -----------
Kilograms +++ That is the correct metric unit of mass to use, but you would not normally mix unit systems like that. You'd either convert the gallon to litres, or stick to Imperial for both. ' So a gallon of milk (US or UK gallon) weighs a certain number of pounds; a litre of milk weighs a certain number of kilogrammes.
A litre (or liter) is a measure of volume, not a measure of weight. A single liter of milk weighs ABOUT 1.03 kilograms.
Probably centilitres.
Biology --> Metric System King Henry Did BASE Drink Chocolate Milk Kilo - Hecto - Deka - BASE [m,L,g] - Deci - Centi - Milli Math --> Metric System King Henry Died Monday Drinking Chocolate Milk Hope this helps.... :\ [{KisS}]
Yes a teaspoon would be good to measure capacity of a milk carton.This is because density of milk is so close to that of water.
Yes a teaspoon would be good to measure capacity of a milk carton.This is because density of milk is so close to that of water.
No.
Of course, how else would you measure how much milk you'd have? You could measure in Imperial gallons, but the metric Litre (or Liter) is also a common way to measure liquid substance (which what milk is, a liquid).
Litres and parts of a litres is used to measure milk.
The unit of measurement for milk is litre (L) in the SI.
millimetres (centimetres could also be used)
Milliliters.
by the gallon here by liters in countries that use metric
One US gallon of producer's milk (not skimmed, semi-skimmed, homogenised etc), weighs 10.1 pounds-force in customary measure and 44.5 newton in metric measure.
When your cooking you need to know how much milk or water you need and if you don't have it in milimeters you can put it in meters.
You would use a millilitre or, equivalently, a cubic centimetre. A larger unit, which could be used, is a litre.