If the water is pure, and the temperature and pressure are both at standard values,
then the mass of one milliliter of water is 1 gram.
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1 milliliter or 1 cubic centimeter of pure water weighs 1 gram, or has the mass of 1 gram.
No, 10 milliliter = 1 centiliter.
It depends on how hot it is. For example, if it is heated to 160o F, it will never boil.
Grams are mass or weight and milliliters are volume, so they cannot be directly converted except for substances having the same density as water. 1 milliliter of pure water at standard temperature and pressure has a mass of 1 gram.
This is (mass of solute) divided by (mass of total solution) expressed as a percentage. The solute is what you are dissolving into the solution. Example: you have 90 grams of water, and you add 10 grams of salt (sodium chloride). The water is the solvent, sodium chloride is the solute, and the solution is salt water. 90 grams + 10 grams = 100 grams (mass of total solution). (10 grams) / (100 grams) = 0.1 --> 10% mass mass percent concentration.