If you think only of pure water you can say:
1 milliliter of pure water weighs 1 gram.
Forget syrup or oil.
For that calculations you need the specific weight (density) of the material.
It depends. If you are talking about pure water, then a millilitre is 1 gram. most other liquids are heavier, so this may not apply to everything.
"Milliliter" is a volume of space. "Gram" is an amount of mass. So the number of milliliters of space that 1 gram fills depends on what substance you're talking about.
-- 1 gram of air fills about 773.4 milliliters.
-- 1 gram of water fills about 1 milliliter.
-- 1 gram of gold fills about 0.053 milliliter.
4567
1 gram = 1 ml
By that logic, 1mg = 1ml
1 milliliter of pure water weighs 1 gram.
Of what? as posed the question makes no sense.
A millilitre is a unit of capacity. A gram is a unit of mass. The two units are therefore incompatible.
one gram of what?
one thousand, 1000
there are one thousand milligrams in one gram
There are 1000 micrograms in one gram.
0.05 L
1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
1 tsp = 5ml
2.2 mililiters = 0.0022 liters
1 tsp = 5 ml
mililiters? 4 ounces is equal to 118.2941 mililiters.
Unequivocally, exactly 1 gram in one gram.
1,000
One. Cubic centimeter is the same as milliliter.
1 tsp = 5 ml
26
.75
700
500