Unfortunately, a milliliter is a unit of volume, and a gram is a unit of weight, so there isn't a way to convert them. Luckily, if you are referring to pure water, the volume of one gram of water is exactly one milliliter.
This only works for water, though.
For all practical purposes an ml and a gm are equal provided that the material is a liquid which is similar to water. As an example the density of molasses is 1.45 times as high as water and 1 ml would be alnost 1.5 gm (or 1 gm would be 0.8 ml). Thi doesn't sound significant for one gram amounts, but measurements often involve 500 ml or more
This becomes even more problematic if dry materials are being measured using a cup measure marked in ml as well as cups and a mass recipie is being followed as happens in many British cookbooks.
There is no consistent accurate relation between a millilitre (volume) and a gram (mass). Special circumstances can be arrived at by adjusting the observation conditions (such as water at 4oC) where there is an equivalency.
No. Although one gram of water equals to one millilitre of water, but it is not for honey. Water is H2O which is lighter than honey (I don't know the chemical equation)
No a millilitre is a measurement of volume usually used for measuring amounts of liquid. A gram is a measurement of weight.
1 gram of water is equal to a millilitre
A millilitre equals 1 gram of water.
It would help if you could spell it right!! But the answer, if you mean for water, is one gram to one millilitre. Hope this helps!
1 millilitre = 1 gram 1 gram = 1 millilitre
1 milliliter of pure water, at standard temperature and pressure, contains 1 gram of mass. 1 gram of mass is equal to 1,000 milligrams of mass. On earth, 1 gram of mass weighs (0.001 x 9.8) = 0.0098 newton (about 0.035 ounce).
It depends on the density and if it's one millilitre of air, wood or wool then it is smaller but if it's steel, copper, iron, gold, silver, platinum, brass or graphite then one gram is smaller than millilitre. BUt we have to consider the further effects or the future mass in mixing or including the other objects so it is more complicated than you think them
0.001 grams. That is, 1/1000 of a gram or 1 thousandth of a gram. Milli in these cases means divided byb 1000. For example, a millilitre is 1/1000 of a litre.
A millilitre is a unit of capacity. A gram is a unit of mass. Without some unit of density to compare, the two units are incompatible.
A millilitre (1000th of a litre) is a unit of volume. A gram/gramme is a unit of mass. Therefore these is no conversion rate.
Very nearly 22 grams. A millilitre and gram used to be corresponding measures but that is no longer the case.