A small milk carton typically contains 250 ml of milk, not 25 liters. The volume of 250 ml is equivalent to 0.25 liters, which is a common size for single-serving cartons. In contrast, 25 liters is a much larger volume, not typically found in consumer milk packaging.
220g - 12g = 208g If there are 250 matches in the box, then 208 - 250 = .832g.
A gram is a measure of weight. There are 8.8 ounces in 250 grams. But that is using the weight ounce. The volume ounce is different. So you can't use a measuring cup to pour in 8.8 ounces and say it is 250 grams. It depends what you pour in the cup. For example a cup (eight ounces of volume) of feathers won't weigh close to 250 grams and a cup of lead will weigh much more.
The number of onions that make up one kilogram can vary significantly depending on the size of the onions. On average, small onions weigh around 100 grams each, so you might need about 10 small onions for one kilogram. Medium onions typically weigh around 150-200 grams, requiring around 5 to 7 onions per kilogram. Large onions can weigh 250 grams or more, meaning you would need about 4 or fewer to reach one kilogram.
According to the standard of weights and measurements, one cup is equivalent to approximately 250 mL. Thus 170 mL of milk will be over half a cup of measurement.
100 new US pennies weigh 250 grams or 8.81849 ounces (about 1/2 pound).
Assuming that a carton of milk contains 1 litre, then there would be 1000 mililitres (1000ml).
250 mL
A millimeter is a unit of length. But there's 1,000 mililiters (unit of volume)of milk in a 1 liter carton
If you're looking at a list of choices, I can't help you pick the best choice from the list because you're not sharing it. My estimate, without even seeing the small carton of milk, is 1 cup (8 fluid ounces, 1/2 pint).
How tall is 55
5 milliters
About 320g in the carton so probably about 310g without the carton
2 days becuase 4 servings a day is 1000ml and it equls to 2L
1 cc of milk = 1 ml , which would weigh approximately 1 gram.
There is about 300 milligrams of calcium in 1 cup of WHOLE milk. However if you drink skim or low fat milk, most of it is actually not available to the body because it needs the fat to assimilate it. If you drink milk for the calcium, you need to drink whole milk.
A cup is 250 mL so there is 250 mL in a cup of milk.
250 gm in a cup of milk.