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.
No, 1.25 ml is less than half a teaspoon. One teaspoon is approximately 5 ml, so half a teaspoon would be around 2.5 ml.
A half of anything is always larger than a third of the same thing.
A gram of liquid tea is much less than an ounce, about 1/29th of an ounce. There are 29.57 milliliters in an ounce, and 1 ml of water weighs about 1 gram.
5g ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- The volume of a teaspoon is considered to be 5 mL. The mass contained depends on the density of the material because the mass is the product between volume and density.
One gram of dried jiaogulan leaf is equivalent to approximately 1/2 tsp. 1/2 tsp. (of good quality jiaogulan) is sufficient for about one 10 oz. cup of tea. The leaves can be reused up to three times.
Tsp(teaspoon) is volume and gram is weight. so it would depend on what the substance is. A gram of cotton would be more than a teaspoon, but a gram of lead would be much less than a teaspoon.
Less than 0.001 gram - in other words, virtually none
1 gram is 0.035274 ounce. yes Yes a gram is less than an ounce. There are 28 grams in an ounce.
.375 ml is much less than one teaspoon. A teaspoon is about 4.92 ml. it is a little more than 1/13th of one teaspoon.
No, 5 gm water will fit in a teaspoon.
No. One is a volume, the other is a weight. 1/4 teaspoon of flour will weigh a lot less than 1/4 teaspoon of lead even if they are both exactly 1/4 teaspoon.
Yes ,a teaspoon holds about 5 grams of water.
A gram of blood loss is less than a quarter teaspoon; women lose more in a typical period, and people lose more in a typical nosebleed.
No, 5 gm water will fit in a teaspoon.
It depends what is in the teaspoon--some things weigh more than others. On average, a teaspoon of water, salt, sugar, and similar items weighs 5 grams. A teaspoon of something lighter, such as powdered sugar, will weigh less. There are 1000 mg in one gram, so your question of 15-30 mg is far less than a teaspoon (250 mg would be 1/4 teaspoon).
No, it is less than a teaspoon
That's impossible to answer. A teaspoon is a measurement of volume. Whereas a gram is a measurement of weight. A gram of feathers might be the size of a golf ball where a gram of lead might be smaller than a pencil eraser.