1 mg of salt equals .00018 teaspoons, so 100 mg eguals 0.018 teaspoons of salt.
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∙ 10y agoFirst Lady Dionne Mi...
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∙ 14y agoThe density will vary depending on the size of the crystals. But an estimate for table salt is
5770 mg.
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∙ 14y agoSince a milligram is a unit of weight and a teaspoon is a unit of volume, it would take someone smarter than me to figure it out. Perhaps it can be done but I don't know how.
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∙ 13y agoThere are 20 teaspoons in 100 milligrams.
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∙ 10y agoThat is 1/5 of a teaspoon
Anonymous
1/3
Anonymous
3
I think it is about 1-1/4 teaspoons
One teaspoon of salt contains 2000 mg of sodium, so 380 mg of sodium would be about 1/5 a teaspoon of salt.Read more: My_soup_label_says_380_grams_of_sodium_-_how_many_teaspoons_of_salt_would_that_equal
Approximately 1.5 teaspoons of table salt contain 360 mg of sodium.
Its 480 mg of salt
That is 260 teaspoons.
There are 2000 mg in 2 grams of salt, as there are 1000 milligrams in a gram.
Technically, A teaspoon is not a unit of weight or quantity, but of volume; i.e. 500 mg of sodium x (57.5/23.0) = 1250 mg of salt.In this case 840 mg X (57.5/23.0) = 2100 mg of salt (approximately)
1010 mg of sodium is 0.2 teaspoons. It is 1/5 of a teaspoon.
15 mg is approximately three teaspoons or one tablespoon.
This is approximately 0.02 teaspoons of sodium, or 1/50 of a teaspoon. In a 2000 calorie diet you are only allowed 2400 mg of sodium.
400 mg is about 1/12 of a teaspoon. ------------------------------------------------- You can not equate a unit of volume (the teaspoon) with a unit of mass (the mg) because it depends on what you are measuring (its density).
About 8,000 mg.