Personally neither as I would use gallons, but to help you think about it:If you had a bathtub which would be easier (and quicker) to measure it if you used your choice to fill the bathtub with water:a teaspoon (used for taking medicine) which holds 5 ml; ora jug which holds 1 l[The answer is litres (l), not millilitres (ml).]
200 L
The most appropriate unit to measure the capacity of water in a bathtub is liters (L) because it provides a more practical and easier-to-understand measurement compared to milliliters (mL) for larger volumes of liquid like water in a bathtub.
100 mL = 0.1 L of water
liters 1 liter = 1000 ml 1 ml = 0.001 L
It depends on the size/shape (length, width and depth OR circumference and depth) of the bathtub. Unless you provide measurements of the tub, it is impossible to answer this question. However for rough estimation, A standard Japanese bath contained about 500 L of water and a metric cup is 250 ml thus it would need around 2,000 cup of water to fill a bath tub. European bathtub would have similar volume of containment unless it is an order specifics tub.
Both really. 1000 mL is 1 L so the water can be expressed in either form but usually in Liters.
1060 ml
A bathtub for people or 4-legged pets . . . definitely. A bathtub for small birds . . . not definitely, but most likely.
There are 1000 mL in 1 L of water.
40 ml
L or mL L Litres, millilitres or fluid onces