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.
3.125 ml is the same as 3.125 cc. Therefore, you would need to fill a 3cc syringe with 3.125 ml of liquid. Just be cautious as most syringes are marked in increments of 0.1 cc, not 0.125 cc, so you may need to estimate.
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.
CC stands for cubic centimeters. ML stands for Milliliters. One cc is equal to one ml. So, if you need 1ml you can use 1cc or 1/5 of a 5cc syringe.
1 cc = 1 ml 0.5 ml = 0.5 cc 0.5 ml fits into a 1cc syringe two times.