Standard solvents densities don't get much less dense than 0.6g/ml, so unless it's a gas, the density will not likely be 1g/12.5ml
This question cannot be answered unless you know the density of the substance that you are asking about. For example, water has a density of 1 gram per mL of liquid, so there would be 125 grams of water in a 125 mL volume of water. For another other substance, the answer will vary depending on its density.
A gram is the weight of 1 ml of water.
1 gram is equal to 1 mL
125 ml/1 l = 125 ml/1000 ml = 125/1000 which you can simplify, if you so wish.
1 ml of water is 1 gram.
Only if the density or concentration is 1 mg/ml
1 gram of water is equal to one ml of water; however 1 gram of lemonade occupies less than 1 ml since it is heavier than water.
Because grams measure mass and milliliters measure volume, this will change based on what you are measuring. If you are measuring water, 1 gram equals 1 milliliter. 125 grams equals 125 milliliters.
This cannot be answered directly since liter is a measurement of volume and gram is a measurement of weight or mass. However if water at 4 deg C is the reference of what is being measured, then 1 gram = 1 milliliter, therefore 125 mg = .125 ml.
The measurements are not compatible. A gram is a measure of mass. A teaspoon and a millilitre are measures of volume. An ounce (unqualified) is a measure of mass but a fluid ounce is a measure of volume. So some of these measure two different things and, according to the basic rules of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. A millilitre of alcohol, for example, will have a mass less than 1 gram but a millilitre of treacle will have a mass of more than one gram. So is a ml more than a gram or less?
1 cup is 250ml. -So 125 ml is half a cup
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