You would need to fill the teaspoon three times to equal one tablespoon.
The unit commonly used to measure the volume of one teaspoon of cough syrup is milliliters (mL). One teaspoon is equivalent to approximately 5 milliliters of liquid.
ANSWER Do you mean volume or weight? If volume - 1 US teaspoon = 0.17 ounces US If weight - it depends of the density of your foodstuff. For example 1 US teaspoon of water = 0.17 oz 1 US teaspoon of buckwheat = 0.15 oz 1 US teaspoon of honey = 0.23 oz and so on.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
If the volume of a teaspoon is ca. 5 mL and the density of uranium is ca. 19,05 g/cm3, a teaspoon contain ca. 95,25 g of metallic uranium.
One-tenth of a teaspoon is volume. Since we do not know what you are measuring or the density of it, all we can do is compare volume to volume. A teaspoon is equal to 5 ml, so one-tenth of that would be 0.5 ml.
NO - mm is a measurement of length, teaspoon is volume . -NO comparison.
You would need to fill the teaspoon three times to equal one tablespoon.
Well it depends on what you are measuring! One is volume the other is weight.
It depends on the density of the substance. A teaspoon, in this instance, is a measure of volume not mass.
The unit commonly used to measure the volume of one teaspoon of cough syrup is milliliters (mL). One teaspoon is equivalent to approximately 5 milliliters of liquid.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
One standard cooking teaspoon holds 5 ml of water.
There are roughly 5,000 milligrams in one teaspoon.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.