Only if you have pure water in mind: 50 milliliters of pure water weigh 50 gram.
A millilitre is a unit of capacity. A gram is a unit of mass. Without some unit of density to compare, the two units are incompatible.
1 ml of water has a mass of approx 1 gram so 50 ml = approx 50 grams. Suppose x grams of sugar are required for a 3% (by mass) solution. Therefore, x/(50+x) = 3/100 That is 97x = 150 so that x = 150/97 = 1.546 grams, approx.
1 teaspoon is approximately 5 grams.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 0.9 milliliters of pure water weigh 0.9 grams or 900 milligrams.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 100 milliliters of pure water weigh 100 grams. Forget syrup or oil. For that calculations you need the specific weight (density) of the material.
This is not a valid conversion. Milliliters (mL or ml) and liters (L) are measures of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 50 milliliters of pure water weigh 50 grams
There are 1,500 grams in 1,500 milliliters.
50 ml of water is 50 grams
1.38 grams/milliliter
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
Milliliters can't be converted to grams. Milliliters measure volume, while grams measure mass.
milliliters are liquid, grams are solid. you either want milligrams or liters
For water (this only applies to water): grams = milliliters.
Density = grams/milliliters 8.96 g/ml = grams Cu/50 ml = 448 grams Cu
50 milliliters = 0.0005 hectoliters
There is 5 ml/grams in a tsp. Milliliters and grams are the same volume.
You need 50 g of this drug.