a liter
No, a glass of water cannot hold less than 0.9 liters. The volume of a glass is fixed, and it cannot hold less than its capacity.
Yes, a 60000cm³ container can hold 50 liters of water. 1 liter is equal to 1000cm³, so 50 liters would be 50,000cm³. Since 50,000cm³ is less than 60,000cm³, the container can hold 50 liters of water.
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
Obviously less. 1000 milliliters make 1 liter so 6 milliliters will be 6/1000 of a liter which is less than 1 liter.
a liter
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No, a glass of water cannot hold less than 0.9 liters. The volume of a glass is fixed, and it cannot hold less than its capacity.
Yes, a 60000cm³ container can hold 50 liters of water. 1 liter is equal to 1000cm³, so 50 liters would be 50,000cm³. Since 50,000cm³ is less than 60,000cm³, the container can hold 50 liters of water.
There are 1000 ml in a liter. 1000ml is greater than 650 ml. So yes.
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
less than 1 liter
2 liters = 2,000 milliliters. That's more than 356 milliliters. 356 milliliters = 0.356 liter. That's less than 2 liters.
Obviously less. 1000 milliliters make 1 liter so 6 milliliters will be 6/1000 of a liter which is less than 1 liter.
Yes its possible a 1 litre container shouldn't be filled the contents should be less than 600ml and if the litre container is full it is also possible to transfer 600mls of the contents and remain with 400mls. -kapanzak
1 milliliter is a thousandth of a liter, so yes, 5L is greater than (will hold more than) 5mL.
less