If we assume that every drop of 0.1 ml.
1 liter = 10,000 drops
it all depends on the size of a drop rroun about 60,000
"Drops" come in many different sizes (the biggest raindrops have as much water as a thousand of the smallest raindrops and the smallest raindrops are a million times as massive as the typical cloud or fog droplet). However, some old cookbooks reckon that there are 72 drops to a teaspoon and there are roughly 200 teaspoons to the liter, so 14,400 drops per liter is a pretty close answer. You could call it 15,000 and not be far wrong.
1 liter equals 1 liter.
It takes 1,000 milliliters to make just 1 liter. Surely 5 milliliters is not enough to make 5 liters.
1 liter = 1.05 quart 1 quart = 0.94 liter
It really depends how you define a drop, as it is pretty ambiguous. If we use a pretty accepted conversion of 1 drop = 0.05 mL, then: 1 L = 1000 mL 1000 mL x (1 drop / .05 mL) = 20,000 drops
1 milliliter = 20 drops.
1 liter
1 liter = 4.22 cups 1 cup = 0.23 liter
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter