A litre is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space so a cubic litre is a measure in 9-dimensional hyperspace!
Assuming you meant 3.5 litres (not cubic litres), the answer depends on its shape. For example, a cuboid with
Length = 1000 cm,
Breadth = 7 cm and
Height = 0.5 cm
has a volume of 3.5 litres but its height is such that not a single 1 cm cube will fit in it!
That said, the answer, that only applies in special circumstances, which you are expected to give, is 3500 cubes.
A cubic centimeter already is a unit of volume. Perhaps you want to convert it to another unit of volume, such as cubic meters, liters, etc.?
Roughly 1mL or 0.001L.There is no comparison. Litre is volume, centimetre is length.
Not always in cubic centimeters. It could be in cubic meters, liters, and so forth.
48 cubic centimetres.
That is 25 cc.
Multiply the height by the width by the depth in centimeters. The will give you cubic centimeters. One cubic centimeter = 1 milliliter. Divide by 1000 and you have volume in liters.
The greatest possible number of 1 centimeter cubes that can fit in the box is equal to the volume of the box divided by the volume of a 1 centimeter cube. In this case, the box has a volume of 3 x 2 x 1 = 6 cubic centimeters, and each 1 centimeter cube has a volume of 1 cubic centimeter. Therefore, the greatest possible number of 1 centimeter cubes that can fit in the box is 6 divided by 1, which equals 6 cubes.
The cube cannot be made from centimetre cubes.
.001 liters (1 mL) is equal to one cubic centimeter.
Cubic centimeters is a volume and cm is a length The question is illogical.
Those are all units of volume. 1 cubic meter = 1000 liters; 1 liter = 1000 milliliters; cubic centimeter is an alternative name for milliliter.
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.