yes a liter is a metric unit
you take all the metric tons...and out them over there ----->
The litre is a unit of volume.Although the litre is not an SI unit, it is accepted for use with the SI, and has appeared in several versions of the metric system.The official SI unit of volume is the cubic metre (m3), equivalent to 1,000 litres.One litre is equal to 1/1,000 cubic metre and is denoted as 1 cubic decimetre (dm3).1 km3 = 1,000,000,000 m3
Kilometers measure in one dimension. Liters measure three dimensional volume. One cannot be converted to the other.
If you are referring to Roman numerals, L is 50 1000 is M If you mean a thousand liters, it's a cubic meter, and if that is water it's also a metric ton.
100 mtpy stands for 100 metric tons per year. This unit is often used to measure production capacity or consumption rates in various industries. It indicates that a facility or process can produce or handle 100 metric tons of a particular material annually.
liters is the answer
Liters
The metric unit of volume is in liters and milliliters
The metric unit for liquid volume is liters. Throughout Europe and much of the world gasoline is sold in liters. North America still uses gallons but that is not a metric or SI unit.
50 liters
i thnk it has something to do with liters... its like liters, deciliters, centiliters or mililiters, or heckaleters and deckaleters sooo i have no clue
No, a quart is not a metric unit; it is an imperial unit of measurement used primarily in the United States and some other countries. One quart is equivalent to approximately 0.946 liters. The metric system uses liters as its standard unit for measuring volume.
The Liter isthe Metric liquid unit of measure.
The metric unit for a gallon of milk is liters.
liters (volume)
Liters
liters