If we assume that every drop of 0.1 ml. 1 liter = 10,000 drops
"Drops" come in many different sizes (the biggest raindrops have as much water as a thousand of the smallest raindrops and the smallest raindrops are a million times as massive as the typical cloud or fog droplet). However, some old cookbooks reckon that there are 72 drops to a teaspoon and there are roughly 200 teaspoons to the liter, so 14,400 drops per liter is a pretty close answer. You could call it 15,000 and not be far wrong.
It depends on the size of the drops which, in turn, depends on the surface tension of the liquid.
1 liter equals 1 liter.
1 liter = 1.05 quart 1 quart = 0.94 liter
It takes 1,000 milliliters to make just 1 liter. Surely 5 milliliters is not enough to make 5 liters.
1 teaspoon is 76 drops. 1/4 teaspoon is 19 drops.
It really depends how you define a drop, as it is pretty ambiguous. If we use a pretty accepted conversion of 1 drop = 0.05 mL, then: 1 L = 1000 mL 1000 mL x (1 drop / .05 mL) = 20,000 drops
1 milliliter = 20 drops.
1 liter
1 liter = 4.22 cups 1 cup = 0.23 liter
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter