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Remember K H D | d c m (kilo, hecto, deka, (liter, meter, gram), deci, centi, milli). Milliliters are three places to the right of liters. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the right. You will get 36 L = 36,000 mL.
1 kilo liter = 1000 liters 1 liter = 1/1000 kilo liter = 0.001 kilo liter
Milli- is 0.001 Kilo- is 1000 A milliliter is one thousandth of a liter. A kiloliter is one thousand liters.
The question being WHY, it is because when the metric system was devised it just ended that way. On the other hand, the British Quart is actually larger in volume than the liter where the US quart is smaller by volume than the liter. By the way this difference in standards between the different countries is what led to the founding of the metric system, a way of globalising weights and measures.
1 kilolitre = 1,000,000 millilitres so 2 kilolitre = 2,000,000 millilitres. Simple!
I would use a gram on a scale because meter is distance, liter is volume, milli is very small, and kilo is very large.
It depends on the density of the material whose volume you are using. With pure water 1 milliliter = 1 gram 1 liter = 1 kilo What could be simpler? :-)
Kilo is a unit of weight, the others are units of volume. To get weight from a volume you need to know the density of whatever it is that you're talking about.
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1 kilo
1 liter is 1 cubic decimeter 1 milliliter is 1 cubic centimeter 1 liter is 1,000 milliliters. 1 kiloliter is 1 cubic meter. 1 kiloliter = 1,000 liters = 1,000,000 milliliters.
not compatible liter is volume kilo is weight