The question has no answer as asked. Litres are a fluid measure of capacity. Kilometres is a measure of distance.
BUT if you were measuring the fuel consumption of a car, that might be (for a small car) about 7 litres of fuel consumed for each 100 kilometres travelled.
3000
3000 ml = 3 liters There are 1000 milliliters in a liter.
3000 milliliters is equal to 3 liters.
3 litres
3 mL is equal to 0.003 liters (1 liter = 1,000 mL).
You would have 2.03 liters in total with 2 deciliters and 3 milliliters. 1 deciliter is equal to 0.1 liters, so 2 deciliters equal 0.2 liters. When you add the 3 milliliters (which is 0.003 liters), you get a total of 2.03 liters.
To convert milliliters to liters, you divide by 1,000. Therefore, 150 milliliters is equal to 0.15 liters. Since 3 liters is equivalent to 3,000 milliliters, you can calculate that there are 0.05 (or 1/20) of 3 liters in 150 milliliters.
3000 liters ^^ that is totally wrong 0.003 liters are in 3 milliliters because 1 liter has 1000 milliliters
3000 millilitres = 3 litres.
No.
1 liter = 1,000 milliliters 2 liters = 2,000 milliliters 3 liters = 3,000 milliliters . . . 5,800 liters = 5,800,000 milliliters
three thousand 3,000