Mass is normally measured in Kg (kilograms). A litre is a measurement of volume. However, there is of course a relationship between the two. For example, given the exact same conditions (same density) one litre of water will have the same mass as another.
Liters is a standard unit of volume, and is customarily used to express the volume of liquids in most areas of the world. Even in the United States, where the metric system is not as widely used, soda is commonly sold in Liter measured quantities.
No. Force is measured in Newtons; the litre is the SI unit for volume.
It is usually measured in liters/milliliters
Grams & milligrams measure weight, not volume. For measuring volume, use cubic centimeters or liters.
3 liters
10 liters
There are 10 liters per decaliter.
Forces are expressed in newtons....i believe...
5,000 liters = 5 cubic meters
47 liters equates to 0.047 cubic meters.* liters x 0.001 = cubic meters
Both really. 1000 mL is 1 L so the water can be expressed in either form but usually in Liters.
Answer: 3.285 L = 3285 ml
Expressed as a percentage, 300/800 x 100 = 37.5 percent.
It is usually measured in liters/milliliters
Litres (or Liters) can be expressed as "Ltr" (UK) or just "L"
There are 1000 ml in a liter. If you have 125 liters, that is 125,000 ml.
The president's relationship with the armed forces is that he is the commander in chief. This is a power that is expressed to him by the constitution.
One liter is 1000cc, so 10,000 liters = 10,000 x 1,000 = 10,000,000cc (ten million).
It is the volume!