One liter represents a unit of volume in the metric system, equivalent to 1,000 cubic centimeters (cm³) or 1,000 milliliters (mL). It is commonly used to measure liquids and is defined as the volume of a cube that measures 10 centimeters on each side. Additionally, one liter is approximately equal to 0.264 gallons in the U.S. measurement system. This standardization makes it widely applicable in various fields, including science, cooking, and industry.
1 litre = 1000 millilitres so 1 litre is gonna be 1 millilitre of one thousandth of a litre.
100 ml is 1/10 of a litre.
500 ml is 1/2 of a litre.
1 litre = 100 centilitres 1 litre = 1000 millilitres
It is 500/1000. You can simplify this but it makes little sense to do so if you want to add other fractions of a litre to this one.
100 litre = 1 litre10-1 litre = 1 deciliter = 0.1 litre10-2 litre = 1 centilitre10-3 litre = 1 millilitre10-6 litre =1 microlitre
A litre is equal to 1000 milliliters. So, a quarter of that (1/4) would represent 250 ml or the equivalent of a cup.
1 Litre is equivalent to 1 kilogram in weight.
1 litre=4.166666667 cup(metric) (s) 1 litre=4.2268 cup(US) (s) 1 litre=3.519506517 cup(Imperial) (s)
1 millilitre = 1/1000 of a litre = 0.001 litre.
One thousandth of a litre.
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.
1 litre is 1 litre anywhere.
1 litre = 1000 millilitres so 1 litre is gonna be 1 millilitre of one thousandth of a litre.
1 litre in a litre
1 litre = 1000 ml → 1/10 litre = 1/10 × 1000 ml = 100 ml
100 ml is 1/10 of a litre.