You would need to specify the capacity of the graduated cylinder. And at that you would probably need to specify the brand.
Look at the 1st figure marked on the graduation going up, then count the graduations from that downwards.
eg. if the first figure is 50ml and there are 10 lines coming up to 50ml then each graduation is 5ml. (50/10)
Milliliters (mL)
A graduated cylinder is a tall, cylindrical container used to measure liquid volume accurately, typically with graduated markings along its side. An Erlenmeyer flask is a conical-shaped container with a narrow neck, commonly used for mixing, heating, and storing liquids. Erlenmeyer flasks are not typically used for precise volume measurements like graduated cylinders.
Volume in the metric system is measured using the liter (L) as the base unit. Smaller volumes are measured in milliliters (mL) and larger volumes in kiloliters (kL). Instruments such as beakers, graduated cylinders, and burettes are used to measure liquid volumes accurately.
"mL" stands for milliliters or 1/1,000 of a liter.
Aluminium.
The letter V typically represents the volume of a cylinder, not the area. The letter A is commonly used to represent the surface area of a cylinder.
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6 cylinder, "b" series, turbocharged
Hot water
* This could mean hundreds of things. * NG could mean Nasogastric * ML probably means milliliters * In a hospital setting, NG mL would mean 'amount of Nasogastric fluid in milliliters' It actually means nanograms per milliliter.
To contain at 20 degrees celsius. To contain at 20 degrees Celsius. This would be written on a graduated cylinder or a volumetric flask.
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