It isn't clear what "units" you are talking about.
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∙ 11y agocm3 (centimeter cubed)
millimeter
A square centimeter is a unit of area; a centimeter is a unit of length or distance.
The unit is not always cubed, but is a basic measurement that has no set size. For example, if two points on a graph were (2,1) and (2,2) the point (2,1) would be one unit higher than the point (2,2.)
You can't compare one with the other. A cubic centimeter is a unit of volume, a centimeter is a unit of length. When you thus have different kinds of incompatible units, you can't add them, subtract them, compare them, or convert one to the other.
They cannot be interconverted. A milliliter is a unit of volume while a centimeter is a unit of distance. a milliliter is equal to a cubic centimeter, however.
You don't. "Cubic centimeter" is a unit of volume, "centimeter" is a unit of length. The question is the same as asking "How do you change gallons to inches ?"
This is a nonsense question. Millimeters are a unit of length and the centimeter cubed is a unit of volume. It is like asking how many kilograms are there in a mile. If however you mean, how many millimeter cubed are there in a centimeter cubed then the answer is 1000 10 x 10 x10
1 cm3 = 1 millionth (1x10-6) m3 There are 100 centimeters in a meter. So a cubic meter is 100 times longer, 100 times wider and 100 times deeper than a cubic centimeter. Thus, there are 100x100x100 = 1,000,000 (1 million) cubic centimeters in a cubic meter.
cm3 (centimeter cubed)
Centimeters are units of distance. They are greater than millimeters, another unit of distance. Centiliters are greater than milliliters among units of volume.
The decimeter is a larger unit of measurement than a centimetre so for any given length, there will be fewer decimetres in it than centimetres.
The centimeter is smaller than the kilometer.
You cannot convert a unit of length (Centimeter) to a unit of volume (Cubic Centimeters).
The metric unit used to measure the density of a solid is grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3). This unit represents the mass of the solid per unit volume, and is commonly used in scientific calculations and measurements of density.
No, a centimeter is 100,000 times smaller than a kilometer.
A centimeter is a unit of length that is 10 times bigger than a millimeter.