If you already had my previous answer I did more research on the metric system regarding crossing measurements. They said it's not really done too much anymore but here is one conversion found on wikipedia that might help you:
1 millilitre = 1 cubic centimetre ≈ 1 gram of water
Milliliters is for volume and milligrams is for mass. You can't compare apples to Oranges.
This cannot be sensibly answered. Milliliters (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, mg is a measure of weight or mass.
60 ml of water is 60 grams
It depends on the substance. Grams measure mass, milliliters measure volume.
when 60 grams of ice melts , there will be 60 grams of liquid water left.
There are 60 mls in 60 grams. Since 1 ml of any substance=1 cc which is equal to 1 gram. So grams is equal to milliliters in conversion.
12 grams of water is equal to 12,000 mg of water and is the same as 12,000 ml of water.
60 grams of water is 60 ml.
260
60ml of water is 60 grams.
Think only of pure water and not of syrup or oil. For water: 60 cubic centimetres are 60 gram.
If it is pure water it is exactly 60 grams, if it is other liquid then is hard to say exactly because it varies according to density. A kilo in weight is equivalent to a litre of water. A litre of water in volume is then 1000 ml. A cube measuring 10 centimetres on each side internally holds exactly a litre of water when 100% filled.
This is not a valid conversion; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
60 grams of water is 4 tbsp.
60 grams of water is 60ml - so 12 times 5 ml