A "litre" can weigh different amounts depending on what the litre is comprised of. For example, a litre of water will weigh more than a litre of chocolate mousse (more air in the mousse, but I admit the example's odd)... If you then dissolve a lot of sugar in the litre of water, it will weigh more than it did previously (the volume will also increase a little, some will have to be poured out to retain "1 litre", but it will not weigh what it did originally). So it is not possible to know how much of a litre weighs a gram without knowing what substance the litre is comprised of.
It is more than half a litre!It is more than half a litre!It is more than half a litre!It is more than half a litre!
At dilution always true:Volume*concentration = amount of solute (= constant, not changing)So 1 (litre) * 5 (%) => 5
1 centilitre = 0.01 litres (or one hundredth of a litre)
Much less. 1000mls are in a litre.
1 litre is 1 litre anywhere.
1000 millilitres = 1 litre ⇒ 500 millilitres = 500 ÷ 1000 litre = 0.5 litre ⇒ 1 litre 500 millilitre = 1 litre + 0.5 litre = 1.5 litre → 2 litre to the nearest litre.
That is 1 litre
A "litre" can weigh different amounts depending on what the litre is comprised of. For example, a litre of water will weigh more than a litre of chocolate mousse (more air in the mousse, but I admit the example's odd)... If you then dissolve a lot of sugar in the litre of water, it will weigh more than it did previously (the volume will also increase a little, some will have to be poured out to retain "1 litre", but it will not weigh what it did originally). So it is not possible to know how much of a litre weighs a gram without knowing what substance the litre is comprised of.
It is 1 litre for practical purposes
a 1/4 litre. A litre is 4 cups of liquid so 1 cup is a fourth litre.
It is 1 litre * 10/100 = 0.1 litre.
1 Litre = 1,000ml 3.4025 Litre = 3,402.5ml
That is approximately on the 1 litre mark.
That is 1 litre
1 litre
Exactly 1 litre. Not surprisingly!