A 1 ml pipette, a 2 ml pipette, a 5 ml pipette, and a 0.5 ml pipette.
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
1 litre equals 1000 mL, and 1 mL = 1 cubic centimeter. So (10 cm)3 = 1000 cm3=which equals 1000 mL = 1 litre.The dimensions are 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm cube.
200 ml is less than a gallon. 200 ml is .2 liters. A gallon is a little less than 4 liters.
less 1 liter = 1000 ml 1 ml = 0.001 L
From a 10 ml vial, you can administer 100 injections of 0.1 ml each. This is calculated by dividing the total volume of the vial (10 ml) by the volume of each injection (0.1 ml), resulting in 10 ml ÷ 0.1 ml = 100 injections.
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
Medicine dropper water top top of a checker the opening of a electric plug
One hand
10 pg/mL or less
a ml (mililitre) is a thousandth of a litre, so its way smaller
Not necessarily. 250 mL is the volume of one standard or metric cup. A drinking glass does not necessarily have to hold this much. Drinking glasses may hold more or less. But a metric measuring cup should hold exactly 250 mL.
Yes. The volume is less than 20ml.
A 10 ml graduated cylinder measures volume. It is used to accurately measure and dispense liquids in laboratory settings.
1 litre equals 1000 mL, and 1 mL = 1 cubic centimeter. So (10 cm)3 = 1000 cm3=which equals 1000 mL = 1 litre.The dimensions are 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm cube.
14.7867648millilitres
a material that could hold enough mL... "/
The m in ml is milli- which is thousandth 1,000 ml = 1.0 l so 140 ml = 0.14 l and 0.14 l is less than 1.2 l so is about 10 times smaller