No, volume and weight are not relatable without knowing the density. However if you want to go ballpark, you can use the density of water which is ~1 gram per millilitre. I.e. a milligram would be 0.001 millilitres.
Chat with our AI personalities
I would use a gram on a scale because meter is distance, liter is volume, milli is very small, and kilo is very large.
King- kilo Henry- hecto Doesn't- deka Usually- unit (gram,liter,meter) Drink- deci Chocolate- centi Milk- milli
Milli means 1/1000, so a gram is more.
Smaller. Because it goes: Basic Unit: liter, gram, meter Deci: deciliter, decigram, decimeter Centi: centiliter, centigram, centimeter Milli: milliliter, milligram, millimeter
Remember K H D | d c m (kilo, hecto, deka, (liter, meter, gram), deci, centi, milli). Liters are three places to the left of millimeters. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the left if you are given the amount in mL. Move the decimal place three times to the right if you are given liters and are converting to milliliters.