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.
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.
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
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.