Voltage
28001 litres unless you are comparing it to another unit of measurement
Millimeters and liters are not comparable units. Perhaps you meant milliliters and liters? In which case, 1 milliliter = 1/1000 of a liter.
Stream or river current . . liters per minute Electrical current . . . . . Ampere
The ampere is the unit that measures current. The current is like a flow in a pipe or a river. Just like a flow could be liters or gallons per second, one ampere is 6.24 x1018 electrons passing per second.
The current rotary engine displaces 1.3 liters. 1.3 liters in a rotary is approximately equal to 2.6 liters of piston engine
The answer depends on the power of the pumps.
If you are comparing liters and milliliters, you'll find that liters are bigger than milliliters. There are 1000 mL in 1 L. There are 10,000 mL in 10 L, so it is bigger than 1000 mL.
Cubic meters, liters, or cubic centimeters (equal to milliliters), depending on the amount of liquid you want to measure.
Length and volume are not directly comparable. Though if you meant volume, i.e. millilitres, you divide by 1000. This gives you 3.75 litres.
The Intelligence Quotient or I.Q. is standardized by comparing a number of testing methods. Since each sample of 20 or more items in a pool has a 95% chance of representing the entire sample, by comparing a number of samples a standard can be established by which the entire population can be compared. If not, it's like comparing gasoline mileage by referring to both gallons and liters.
Liters is a measurement of volume, while pounds is a measurement of weight. They aren't directly comparable, unless you specify what is being measured. One liter is defined as being the volume of one kilogram of pure water, which is approximately equal to 2.2 pounds, so 76 liters of water would be about 168 pounds.
The two are incompatible; a litre is a current volume measurement and a pound is an obsolete mass measurement.