Yes.
Gram is a unit of mass, millilitre is a unit of volume; only for water 1 mL has a mass of 1 g.
1 gram is equal to 1 mL
1 gram of water is equal to one ml of water; however 1 gram of lemonade occupies less than 1 ml since it is heavier than water.
1 gram is equal to 1 mL.
1 ml of water is 1 gram.
One gram of sugar is approximately equivalent to 1 milliliter (ml) in volume. Since 1 milliliter is equal to 1 cubic centimeter (cc), 1 gram of sugar is approximately equal to 1 cc.
One milliliter is equal to one gram (1 mL= 1 g), and there are 1,000 milligrams in a liter, so 3 mL is equal to 3,000 milligrams and 100 mg is equal to .1 mL.
1 millilitre (equivalently 1 centimeter cubed) of water is equal to 1 gram. The relationship above only holds true for water at 4 deg Celsius. The density of water changes with temperature so at any other temperature 1 ml of water not be equal to 1 gram(although it will be close).
depends, in theory 1 litre = 1 kilo gram, however where medications are involved, you must read the instructions as they may be 1 gram per 500 milliliter's, or 1mg per 5 ml or any other combination, you get the drift
1 gram is equal to 981 dynes.
1 000 ml equal 1 L.So 1 mL equal 0,001 l.