Impossible.
A milliliter is one onethousandth of a liter, or could be writen as 1 milliliter=.001 liters
There's something missing from the question. It could be the part that was supposed to make it challenging. -- Fill the 40-ml beaker. -- Use it to fill the 30-ml one. -- Now you have 10 ml in the 40-ml beaker. -- Pour the 10 ml into the 200-ml beaker. -- Do all of that again. -- Now you have 20 ml in the 200-ml beaker. It doesn't matter what size the 200-ml beaker is. You don't need that number at all.
I could never remember how many milliliters were in a cubic centimeter until he reminded me that they were always the same thing. Now I have no trouble remembering that there are five milliliters in a teaspoon.
Yes. In fact, you could pour that much into it six times, andstill have enough room left in there for 20,000 more milliliters.(Whatever you do, though, it would be really tough to move the drum.)
* This could mean hundreds of things. * NG could mean Nasogastric * ML probably means milliliters * In a hospital setting, NG mL would mean 'amount of Nasogastric fluid in milliliters' It actually means nanograms per milliliter.
* This could mean hundreds of things. * NG could mean Nasogastric * ML probably means milliliters * In a hospital setting, NG mL would mean 'amount of Nasogastric fluid in milliliters' It actually means nanograms per milliliter.
No, millimeters is a unit of measure for distance. Milliliters is the usual measurement used although other fluid units could be used.
beakers are jar use in a lab
Objects do not "weigh" a volume measurement like milliliters, as weight is a measurement of force due to gravity acting on mass. However, a milliliter of water at standard temperature and pressure (STP) weighs approximately 1 gram, as the density of water is 1 gram per milliliter. So, a small object like a paperclip or a coin that displaces exactly 1 milliliter of water would weigh approximately 1 gram.
900ml=1quart =4 cups so 2000ml would be 2 quarts+200ml or 8 cups+200ml(which is 50ml short of a cup). I hope i helped that is as close as i could get!
You could pour the liquid into a measuring beaker or graduated jug.You could pour the liquid into a measuring beaker or graduated jug.
A small syringe would be a good way to measure a milliliter of liquid. Remember that one CC (cubic centimeter) is equal to one milliliter. Many small syringes hold 3 CC which would be the same as 3 milliliters. Usually there are graduations on the syringe which indicate 1 CC and even partial measurements of CCs. If you don't have a syringe, you could get very close with a kitchen measuring spoon. 1/4 teaspoon is equal to 1.07 CC which is 1.07 Milliliters.