1 milliliter is a thousandth of a liter, so yes, 5L is greater than (will hold more than) 5mL.
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One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
a ml (mililitre) is a thousandth of a litre, so its way smaller
No, a fluid ounce is more
A cup is more than a fluid ounce.
Things that float in a fluid are less dense than the fluid. Things that sink in a fluid are more dense than the fluid.
1 US fluid gallon is 128 fluid ounces. That's more than 100 of them.
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An object will float in a fluid if it is less dense than that fluid, because the mass of that object displaces less of the fluid than is the volume of the object. An object denser than that fluid would continue to displace the fluid until it met something either solid or more dense.
The object's density.If less than the density of the fluid, the object floats.If more than the density of the fluid, the object sinks.
Can a 1998 Chevy Malibu LS hold more than 6.9 quarts of transmission fluid/or how many quarts does it take to fill up the transmission after being drained?
it will float providing it is in that fluidIt will float on the surface of the fluid.
It would burst.