I dnt know
A 1.0 ml syringe will not hold 1.4 cc.
1/2 of a cc/ml
ml and cc are the same..are yiu sure your dose is not .5 then it would be half
The spelling and the meaning
1 ml (millileter) is defined as one cubic centimeter (1 cc) so a 3 ml mark is also a 3 cc mark and hence 1cc is equal to 1/3 of the 3 ml syringe or the 1 ml mark.
This is a badly phrased question. 3 cc = 3ml. a millilitre is a centimetre cubed and that is exactly what cc means. if the syringe takes a max of 3ml, then 3.125 is a full syringe and a 1/24th of a syringe
In a 100 cc syringe, 0.09 mL is located approximately at the 0.09 mL mark. Since 1 cc is equivalent to 1 mL, you can easily find this measurement by looking for the scale on the syringe. The 0.09 mL mark is just slightly below the 0.1 mL line.
It can be measured using tuberculin syringe 1 ml.
It probably says mL and not mi. One mL (mililiter) is equal to one cc (cubic centimeter), so 20 mL = 20 cc
300 mL - A cc (cubic centimeter) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
1 mL = 1 cc, so however many mL of the medication you are supposed to take is the same number as the number of cc's.
A 1 cc syringe measures volume in cubic centimeters (cc), which is equivalent to milliliters (mL). Therefore, it can also be expressed as 1 mL. The markings on the syringe typically indicate increments in tenths of a milliliter, allowing for precise measurements of liquid.