1 L = 1000 mL = 1000 cm3 4.2 L = 4200 mL = 4200 cm3
1,000 cm3 = 1 L
3.2 cm3 = (3.2 / 1,000) = 0.0032 L
1 L =1 000 mL
So 4 mL = 0.004 L.
4.2 L = 4200 cm3
1 Litre is about 4.2 cups. So 1/4 of a Litre is about 1.05 cups. So the answer is about 1 cup of water.
density = mass/volume = 20/5 = 4 g/cm3
4.5 kms equals 4 500 000 metric system works in 10s 100s or 1000s here is a rough overview 10 mm equals 1 centimetre 100 centimetre equals 1 metre also 1000 millimetres equals 1 metre 1000 metres equals a kilometre the metric system also works on volume as well 1 cubic metre equals 1000 litres 10 cms cubed is 1 litre
2 quarts equals how many pints2 quarts equals 4 pints.
As one litre equals about 0.264 gallons, we need to multiply 18 by 0.264 to find out how many gallons are in the 18 litres. That works out to about 4.75 gallons (or, if you like, 4 and 3/4ths gallons) in the 18 litres.
For all practical purposes 1 litre = 1000 cc or cm3 (Actual figure is 1 litre = 1000.027 cm3 which is the volume of 1 kilogramme of pure water at 4 degrees centigrade and 760 mm pressure).
is not it is less
4 litre equals 30.865 cups.
4 cups because 1 cup equals 250mL and there are 1000mL in a litre.
A litre is a cubic measure (with 3 dimensions), so a "cubic litre" would have 9 dimensions. Most people have difficulty with with 4 dimensions let alone 9, so I doubt that is what you mean.Do you perhaps mean: How many litres in 1 cubic metre?1 cubic metre = 1000 litres1 litre = 1000 cubic centimetres.cubic centimetres are abbreviated to cm3, cu cm or cc.So 1 litre = 1000 cm3= 1000 cu cm= 1000 cc.
4 cups. 1 cup = 250 mL 1 litre = 1000 mL
There is not much to calculate here - 4 cm3 is the volume. The mass is irrelevant for this problem.There is not much to calculate here - 4 cm3 is the volume. The mass is irrelevant for this problem.There is not much to calculate here - 4 cm3 is the volume. The mass is irrelevant for this problem.There is not much to calculate here - 4 cm3 is the volume. The mass is irrelevant for this problem.
0.000004
There are 1000 millilitres in a litre
1000 ml = 1.0 litre 250 ml = 0.250 litre
1 cup's volume is around 0.25Lt = 1/4 Lt so 1 cup equals 1 quarter (of litre)
4 cups make up a litre so one cup must have 1/4 of a litre