no, one is a measure of volume, the other weight.
100 milliliters of sugar is approximately 200 grams.
A milliliter equals a cubic centimeter, and there are 1003, or 1000000, cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, so 63 milliliters is 63 millionths of a cubic meter (63 x 10-6 m3, or 6.3 x 10-5 m3).
1.78 grams per cubic centimeters equals the density of the material that the question talks about.
Since one milliliter equals 1,000 cm3, we just multiply 0.025 mL by 1,000, which equals: 25 cm3.
Material density should be specified. Assume density is one gm/cc, then 128 milligrams equal 0.128 grams equals 0.128 cubic centimeters or 0.128 milliliters.
Milliliters and cubic centimeters are equivalent120 mL=120cc
For water (this only applies to water): grams = milliliters.
G/mL3
1 cubic meter is equal to 1,000,000 grams or 1,000,000 milliliters. Therefore, 2.64 grams is equal to 2.64 milliliters.
4.2 liters is the equivalent of 4,200 cubic centimeters. 4.2 liters equals 4,200 milliliters equals 4,200 cubic centimeters. One liter is equal to 1,000 milliliters.
The milliliter and the cubic centimeter are equal volumes.
The milliliter and the cubic centimeter are equal volumes.
Exactly there is 3785 milliliters in a gallon.
240 ml
One milliliter equals one cubic centimeter or one cc
100 milliliters of sugar is approximately 200 grams.
1 milliliters equals 1 cm3. So 1.5 cubic centimeters equals 1.5 milliliters.