25 mls
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∙ 14y ago15 mls = 0.51 fl oz (US).15 mls = 0.51 fl oz (US).15 mls = 0.51 fl oz (US).15 mls = 0.51 fl oz (US).
They are different units of measurment - mls are volume and mgs are weight.
You divide the grams by the density.
10 of them
There is no standard conversion, since milliliters is a measure of volume whereas kilos is a measure of weight. (They can only be converted if you say what substance you are converting; e.g. 1500 mls of mousse will be fewer kilos than 1500 mls of water, since there is more air in the mousse). Generally, water converts at 1 ml to 1 gram (1000 grams per kilo, so you can work it out). But this does not work for substances that are not as runny as water -i.e. for oil, honey, squash, etc... for these, this conversion is very inaccurate and should not be used.
750 ml
200mL
There is not enough information to determine, because grams is a measure of WEIGHT and mls is a measure of LIQUID. <<<adr>>>
500 ml of what. It will vary depending on what liquid you have Mls don't convert to ounces. Mls are a measure of volume and ounces are a measure of weight. Unless you are asking about fluid ounces. You need to be more exact with your question. 1 fluid ounce = 29.57 mls
No, milliliters (ml) and grams (g) are not equal. Milliliters measure volume, while grams measure weight. The relationship between the two depends on the density of the substance being measured.
No 3 L = 3000 ml
It is a measuring unit, much like a "pint" or a "litre". An imperial Gill is 142 mls, or 5 imperial fluid ounces. A customary US gill is 118mls, or 4 US fluid ounces. See related link for more info.
How many slices of proscuitto are in a kilo
If you're weighing a very runny liquid (such as water or milk), 150g = 150 mls. However if you're measuring something less runny (like syrup or yoghurt), or you're attempting to measure flour/sugar in mls, the conversion is impossible to do without first knowing (in the question) what substance you are trying to convert into mils. (Since mls is a volume measure, and grams is a weight, so 150g of chocolate mousse (for example) will result in a bigger volume (mls) than 150g of honey will result in.)
One fifth, given a standard 250ml measuring cup.
well with a graduated cylinder you can measure liquid
"oz" is a measure of weight/mass, "mls" is a measure of volume, you can not equate the two without knowing the density of the 650mls of the substance being measured.