Food ingredients such as salt, sugar, etc.
You can pretty much measure anything in milligrams.
Anything which is solid can be measured in Milligrams. 1 gm = 100 mgs 1 kg = 1000 gms Drugs for instance, are usually measured in milligrams
Objects composed of tiny amounts of mass.
Anything with a combined mass of less than a gram, generally.
The number of milligrams in 10 milliliters depends on the density of the substance being measured. For example, if you are measuring water, which has a density of approximately 1 gram per milliliter, then 10 milliliters would equal 10,000 milligrams. However, for other substances, you would need to know their specific density to calculate the corresponding milligrams.
Milligrams would make more sense.
medicine
You can pretty much measure anything in milligrams.
Anything which is solid can be measured in Milligrams. 1 gm = 100 mgs 1 kg = 1000 gms Drugs for instance, are usually measured in milligrams
mass
pharmaceuticals
Medications, small amounts of chemicals, and other tiny quantities are measured in milligrams.
It could refer to density, where the mass is measured in milligrams and the volume in decilitres. Or It could refer to concentration in a fluid where the mass of the "active" substance is measured in milligrams and the volume of the solution (possibly solute) is measured in decilitres.
Any unit of measure for mass such as 'ounces', 'milligrams', 'kilos' etc.
Of course...i think
Milligrams
no