For this you would have to look at the beaker. Most modern beakers measure in litres and millilitres.
Use a beaker, obviously. A beaker is wider than a graduated cylinder.
You could pour the liquid into a measuring beaker or graduated jug.You could pour the liquid into a measuring beaker or graduated jug.
No, millimeters is a unit of measure for distance. Milliliters is the usual measurement used although other fluid units could be used.
beaker
That would depend on the manufacturor... Most often in grams and milligrams but there might be some out there that are graduated in ounces... It should be printed on a sticker on the balance itself!
The unit of measurement that a graduated cylinder uses is the volume/mass of water.
Milliliters, sometimes liters
Millilitres. There 1,000 millilitres in 1 litre.
measurement of liquids
Use a beaker, obviously. A beaker is wider than a graduated cylinder.
Graduated Cylinder.
You could pour the liquid into a measuring beaker or graduated jug.You could pour the liquid into a measuring beaker or graduated jug.
Beakers are for very short term storage of chemicals. They are graduated, but not accurately, so they are impractical for meaningful measurements. A beaker's graduations are estimates at best; to be accurate, use a graduated cylinder for measuring liquid volume.
A Volumetric Pipette is the most accurate and used for titration calculations, if you include that as a type of pipette then it is FAR more accurate than a graduated cylinder. A beaker is very inaccurate so don't even go there.
Graduated Cylinder (A+)
No, millimeters is a unit of measure for distance. Milliliters is the usual measurement used although other fluid units could be used.
It allows you to fill it to a specified volume, which you can then use in your experiment. You can add a solute to it so that it will be at a specified concentration. That's only if the measurements are not critical. If the volume measurement is critical, you need to use a graduated cylinder. Also, you can use it to hold water to make a hot water bath for heating a substance in a test tube.