A 1 ml pipette, a 2 ml pipette, a 5 ml pipette, and a 0.5 ml pipette.
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
1 litre equals 1000 mL, and 1 mL = 1 cubic centimeter. So (10 cm)3 = 1000 cm3=which equals 1000 mL = 1 litre.The dimensions are 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm cube.
200 ml is less than a gallon. 200 ml is .2 liters. A gallon is a little less than 4 liters.
less 1 liter = 1000 ml 1 ml = 0.001 L
mg is smaller than mL
One possible answer is Yes. This is logically correct because it does hold "more than or less than" 5 ml of fluid since it does not hold that amount!The more prosaic answer is more than.
Medicine dropper water top top of a checker the opening of a electric plug
One hand
10 pg/mL or less
a ml (mililitre) is a thousandth of a litre, so its way smaller
A graduated cylinder is a type of glass container used in laboratories for measuring volume. A 10 mL graduated cylinder can only hold up to 10 mL of liquid.
Not necessarily. 250 mL is the volume of one standard or metric cup. A drinking glass does not necessarily have to hold this much. Drinking glasses may hold more or less. But a metric measuring cup should hold exactly 250 mL.
Yes. The volume is less than 20ml.
NONE, it holds 355 ml ( which is less than one tenth of a gallon )
1 litre equals 1000 mL, and 1 mL = 1 cubic centimeter. So (10 cm)3 = 1000 cm3=which equals 1000 mL = 1 litre.The dimensions are 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm cube.
14.7867648millilitres
a material that could hold enough mL... "/