no, it will take one liter of water in standard conditions to do so
No. Every one of those cubic cm has exactly the same volume as that 1 milliliter.
True
The volume of one milliliter of anything is 1 milliliter.
1 milliliter has the same volume as 1 cubic centimeter. Liters and milliliters are typically used to describe the volume of a liquid, though.
In terms of liquid volume, a cubic centimeter is equal to one milliliter. In the metric system, these two units of volume measurements are equivalent.
Units of volume are cubic meter, cubic centimeter, liter, or milliliter. 1 cubic centimeter is 1 milliliter. 1 liter = 1000 milliliter is 1 cubic decimeter.
1cc (cubic centimeter) and 1mL (milliliter) are the same volume.
1cc (cubic centimeter) and 1mL (milliliter) are the same volume. So, 1mL = 1cc
The volume of 1 milliliter is 1 cubic centimeter.
1cc (cubic centimeter) and 1mL (milliliter) are the same volume.
The volume of 1 cubic centimeter is 1 milliliter. That's the same volume.
1cc (cubic centimeter) and 1mL (milliliter) are the same volume. So, 1.35mL = 1.35cc
the unit cubic centimeters, cc's or cm3 is used to measure volume. the displacement of an engine is its volume the cylinders can hold, measured in cubic centimeters (or cubic inches). 1 cubic centimeter= 1 milliliter therefore 1000cc's = 1L.
It has a volume of 1000 cubic centimeters, which is 1000 milliltres or 1 liter. There is no such thing as a cubic milliliter