over 1 million
2 Liters is already in the metric system. It can be broken down into 2000 mL, 2000 cm3, and 2 m3. 1 L = 1000 mL = 1000 cm3 = 1 m3 You can derive different units from there.
over 40 million
41000
Women did.
Millimeters can't be converted with liters. Millimeters measure length, while liters measure volume.
500 millimeters
Sorry - millimeters is a Length BUT liters is a volume.
approximately 25 millimeters ( mm) is 1 inch , so 7.37 inches is roughly 184.25 millimeters ( liters is a measurement of volume , inches / millimeters is a measurement of length )
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the metric system, huh? Well, there are 1,000 milliliters in a liter, so if you have 7.5 liters, you just gotta multiply that by 1,000 to get 7,500 milliliters. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.
Millimeters measure linear distances, liters measure capacity.
1 millimeter of rainfall = 1 liter of rainfall per 1 square meter which is 1 mm of rainfall = 1 liter applied to 1 m2 which is 1mm = 1L/m2 for example Rainfall recorded = 250mm City area = 100,000m2 Volume of rainfall in the city = 250 x 100,000 = 25,000,000 liters
Liters are volume but millimeters is distance so you cannot do this. You may be refeeriing to cubic millimeters. 1 liter is 1000 cubic centimeters or 100,000 cubic millimeters. Thus 125 cubic millimeters = 125/100,000 = 0.00125 litres. Make sure that is what you are looking for.
1 Liter is equal to 1000 milliliters, so there are 5.3 Liters in 5300milliliters, or in other words 5300 milliliters equals 5.3 Liters.
It depends on the container, because 1 liter is capacity, but millimeters are length. If you meant to say 1 liter is how many milliliters, than the answer is 10,000 milliliters. If you meant to write 1 meter is how many millimeters, the answer is 10,000 millimeters.
1000 mL = 1 L so 2400 mL = 2.4 L. Simple!
Millimeters is a measure of distance, and liters is a measure of volume; the two cannot be translated. There are, however, 3000 mililiters in 3 liters.Millimeters measure only one dimension. You need three dimensions, length, width, and height to compute liters.