1/2 tsp
2 is the answer
Yes. In the US, the tablespoon as a unit of measure is about 15 ml; in Australia, 20 ml.
No, because is n=1, the electron is in the first energy level, therefore cannot have a l=2, because l= n-1. Or more simply put l=2 is a d-orbital, and there are no d-orbitals in the first energy level. ml=0 is correct because ml= +-l through 0.
2 litres/ 20 ml = 2000 ml / 20 ml = 2000/20 = 100 of them.
2 ml is approximately 0.141 tablespoon
1/2 tsp
A 1/2 tablespoon in the US and other regions equals 1/4 fl. ounce. A 1/2 tablespoon in Australia equals 10 ml. A Victorian and Edwardian 1/2 tablespoon equals approximately 12.5 ml. or more.
1 million
2 tablespoon is approximately 30 ml
19.71 ml 1 milliliter equals 0.202 US teaspoons. 1 teaspoon is 4.928 milliliters
That is 28.35 ml.
Half tablespoon is approximately 7.5 grams
Since 1 tablespoon is 15 ml, 30 ml are 2 tablespoon.
A standard tablespoon is 15 ml, so half will be 7.5 ml
30 ml in Canada is 2 table spoons.However, according to "http://www.lemelange.com/conversion_chart.htm"'s conversion chart:"A note about kitchen measurements:Not all tablespoons are the same. The Australian tablespoon is 20 ml; the British tablespoon is 17.7 ml. In most Canadian recipes, the tablespoon is 15 ml., while the American tablespoon is 14.2 ml."
1 tablespoon is 15 ml. -SO 26 gm is 1.75 tablespoons ( or 1 and 3/4)