Milligrams and milliliters are not, strictly speaking, "convertible" in the regular sense. Milligrams is a measure of weight. Milliliters is a measure of volume. The one cannot directly be converted to the other unless more information is available. A conversion might be made, but it would depend on, say, knowing the density of the material being considered. It would depend on that density. Water is one milligram per one milliliter.
If you take 1000 milligrams of distilled water at 0 degrees centigrade, it will measure exactly 1 milliliter. Likewise, 1 kilogram of distilled water at 0 degrees centigrade is exactly 1 liter. However, for other substances, the answer will differ. It depends on the volume of the substance that weighs 1000 mg. For example, 1000 mg of lead (Pb) is far smaller in volume than 1000 mg of water (H2O), which is far smaller in volume of 1000 mg of gaseous Oxygen (O2). ML is milliliters - a volume. mg is milligrams - a weight. 1000 milliliters = 1 liter. 1000 milligrams = 1 gram.
1 liter = 1,000 milliliters
1 gram = 1000 milligramsSo take the number of milligrams and divide by 1000 to get the number of grams.5.6 Milligrams = 0.0056 Grams
1 gram = 0.001 milligrams so 0.125 grams = 125 milligrams. So you need 125 pills.
Each liter contains 1,000 of them.You can take it from there.
A 1000 milliliters
453,592 milligrams per pound.
4.928921614571597 milliliters to 1 tsp.
50 mg
This depends on what you want to do. If you are making a solution, how many milligrams per milliliter do you want the solution to be (or g/L as the case may be)? If you have a liquid and were told to take X milligrams but can only measure in milliliters, then you need to know the density of the liquid. For example, in standard conditions (room temperature and pressure) water is 998.23 milligrams per milliliter. So you'd use about 0.33 milliliters of water to get 325 milligrams of it.
Not necessarily. The equivalence of milligrams (mg) to milliliters (ml) varies depending on the density or concentration of the substance. For water, 100mg is roughly equal to 0.1 ml, but for other substances, it may be different. Always refer to the specific substance's density to accurately convert between mg and ml.
That is 2,000 ml
7500millilitres
There are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter. One milliliter is 0.001 liter
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
0.00012 the above is a common mistake. it's actually supposed to be 0.12 x 1000 which equals 120. the previous person divided instead of multiplied or just moved the decimal wrong.
There are about 5 milliliters in a teaspoon.