Are you wanting to add these two together, then the answer is 45 ml.
Are you wanting a comparison to something 'real life' you can get a handle on?
then head to the kitchen or medicine cabinet. If you have any liquid medicine such as cough syrup or most children's medicines, the measuring 'cups' have both teaspoon and milliliter stamped on it. Also most kitchen 'teaspoons' and 'tablespoons' have the metric equivalent on them.
1 teaspoon is approx 5 ml, and 1 tablespoon is approx 15 ml.
So 20 ml is approx 4 teaspoons, and 25 ml approx 5 teaspoons.
Hope this helps.
25 ml of water is 25 ml: whether or not it is in a test tube.
The first test tube baby was born on July 25 1978. Louise Brown, who was conceived using in vitro fertilization is the world's first test tube baby.
With 25ml methanol and 75ml water, there is 100ml in total. So there is 25/100 = 25% by volume methanol.
This depends on the temperature; at 25 oC the volume of water is 300 mL.
The volume cannot be 25 cm, since that is not a volume measure. Assuming the volume is 25 cm3, Density = mass/volume = 500 g / 25 cm3 = 20 grams per cm3
A volume of 25 milliliters is the same as a volume of 0.8454 fluid ounces.
Louise Joy Brown was the first successful test-tube baby and was born on July 25, 1978.
The first test tube baby was born on July 25 1978. Louise Brown, who was conceived using in vitro fertilization is the world's first test tube baby.
With 25ml methanol and 75ml water, there is 100ml in total. So there is 25/100 = 25% by volume methanol.
July 25, 1978 in the UK
25%
If the concentration of alcohol and water solution is 25 percent alcohol by volume, the volume of alcohol in a 200 solution is 50.
Volume is two dimensional and no area can hold 25 gallons of water, however 25 gallons is a volume. Do you mean what dimensions would hold 25 gallons?
200m long.
the first test tube babies were invented in great Britain Louise Joy Brown July 25, 1978 by Dr. Patrick Steptoe and Robert Edwards
Louise Joy Brown, born in England on July 25, 1978
This method only works for solids, and obviously if you pour a liquid into another liquid to test it's volume, you will lose the liquid. First you put a general amount of water into a graduated cylinder, or a cylinder with lines marking the volume. I would recommend using about 10 mmL of water. Next, drop your solid into the graduated cylinder. Observe what the water line has risen to be. For example, the water line begins at 10 mmL, and after you drop your solid in, it has risen to be 25 mmL. You then subtract the old volume from the new, and the difference is your solid's volume. In the example, you would subtract 10 from 25 to get 15.
July 25, 1978... named Louise Joy Brown