Yes. The litre (to give it its proper, French, spelling) is the basic unit of fluid volume.
Although intended for fluids, it has become popular with car manufacturers, for some bizarre reason, in describing the space inside their vehicles. The cubic metre would be far more sensible, and even better and just as acceptable in the SI system, the length, width and height in metres or millimetres!
The cubic meter is the only standard unit of volume in the SI.The liter is a non-SI unit, but it is officially acceptedand may be used with metric prefixes.
No, it is not part of the metric system. A quart is equivalent to .95 liters.
Yes, commonly, the milliliter, or one thousandth of a liter.
The unit of liquid volume in the metric system is the liter (L).
Liter for liquids or square meter for solids.
metric
No. The unit of volume is the cubic meter, also the liter.
Liters are a part of the Metric System. It is used to measure liquids.
The "L" is in the metric system for liter, which is most commonly used with liquids.
The cubic meter is the only standard unit of volume in the SI.The liter is a non-SI unit, but it is officially acceptedand may be used with metric prefixes.
The basic unit of length in the metric system is the meter. Grams are used to measure weight and liter is used to measure liquid capacity.
No, it is not part of the metric system. A quart is equivalent to .95 liters.
There is only 1 metric system - a German litre equals an English litre.
liter
Yes, commonly, the milliliter, or one thousandth of a liter.
No, a liter is the standard unit of volume in the metric system. If you're looking for the standard unit of mass, it would be the gram.
The unit of liquid volume in the metric system is the liter (L).