1 milliltre = 1 cm3 So 2 litres = 2000 ml = 2000 cm3
1 millilitre of water at sea level and 1degree centigrade will be one gram in mass. Other substances may vary in their mass. A milliltre is a measure of volume. Therefore, a more dense sustance (lead for example) will have a greater mass than a less dense one (for example air). It is usual to measure liquids in milliltres, solids tend to be measured by mass.
much, much harder and much, much different i can tell u that
How much
too much
1 milliltre = 1 cm3 So 2 litres = 2000 ml = 2000 cm3
A teaspoon holds 5 ml of water. So a milliltre is 1/5 of a teaspoon.
A milliltre is a unit of capacity. A centimetre is a unit of length. The two units are therefore incompatible.
1,000 mL = 1 L Therefore, 1/1,000th of a litre is equivalent to 1 millilitre.
1 liter = 1000 ml → ½ liter = ½ × 1000 ml = 500 ml.
None. A milliltre cube is a measure in 9-dimensional hyperspace! A metre cube is a measure of volume in "normal" 3-dimensional space. According to basic dimensional analysis, conversion between measures with different dimensions is not valid.
You cannot convert a measurement of a liquid to the measurement of a solid without knowing the density of the material you are wanting to measure. It would be equivalent of asking how many gallons are in a mile.
1 millilitre of water at sea level and 1degree centigrade will be one gram in mass. Other substances may vary in their mass. A milliltre is a measure of volume. Therefore, a more dense sustance (lead for example) will have a greater mass than a less dense one (for example air). It is usual to measure liquids in milliltres, solids tend to be measured by mass.
100 A millimetre is a length. Cups hold volume. If you meant millilitres, then a 100-milliltre cup will hold 100 millilitres > Accepted values for kitchen utensils: 1 glass = 200 ml 1 cup = 250 ml 1 mug = 300 ml
To measure rainfall you use a rain gauge which you can either buy, or get a bottle and cut off the top. Then you attach it to a sturdy structure. And once an amount of time has past (you decide how long) you empty the water in it into a measuring jug. That tells you how much water has fallen.
This is impossible to answer unless you know what substance we are talking about. The same mass of different substances occupies different amounts of space. The mass of 1 centimetre cubed of a substance is called its density. Temperature also matters as most substances become less dense when you heat them. If you are talking about water at room temperature, one centimetre cubed has a mass of approximately 1 gram. A milliltre is the same as 1 cm cubed. Thus you would use 6.81 ml in your example. For other substances you'd have to divide 6.81 by the density.
I watched it. It was kind of stupid. That is why I stick with anime. Anime has more creative storylines and the characters are usually much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much, much,much, much, much better to look at,especially the males he he he 0_- .