100
Chat with our AI personalities
Well, honey, if you want to convert two tenths of a liter to milliliters, you simply multiply 0.2 by 1000 because there are 1000 milliliters in a liter. So, two tenths of a liter is 200 milliliters. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
None. Millimetres are a unit of length; litres are a unit of volume. Your question is similar to asking how many inches are in a gallon.
(edit)
I presume you meant to ask how many milliLITRES are in 1 tenth of a litre. There are 1000 millilitres in a litre. 1 tenth of 1000 is 100, so there are 100 millilitres in one tenth of a litre :)
(edit again)
And not even mention there are no millimetres in a litre, which was the question?
No, it's not a good idea to assume. It could also be millimetres in a tenth of a metre. Or something entirely different. The correct answer is "none", not "I assume you meant..." Assume nothing and answer the question as stated, perhaps adding a "but if what you meant is..., then...". This could have been a trick question, not a typo.
Remember K H D | d c m. Millilitres is three places to the right of Litres. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the right. So in this case the answer is 200 millilitres.
Two hundred 1 litre = 1,000 millilitres 0.1 litre = 100 millilitres 0.2 litre = 200 millilitres
There are 1000 millilitres in one litre. Therefore, 23.5 millilitres is equal to 235/10000 litres. Expressed as a vulgar fraction in its simplest form, this is equal to 47/2000, or forty-seven two-thousandths, of a litre.
1500ml is equal to 1.5 litres and 1500 millilitres.
None. Meters and liters are two different types of measurements, the former being a length and the latter being a volume (how long and how full). Milli means 1/1000 in the metric system, so there are 1000 milliliters in one liter.
None, since there can be no conversion. A millimetre is a measure of length in 1-dimensional space while a litre is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space. The two measure different characteristics and, according to the most basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at comparisons or conversions between the two are fundamentally flawed.