An orange has about . 1 mg of orange. The vitamin C in an orange will help the body absorb iron supplements if eaten around the same time.
No, 1.5 milligrams is not the same as 1500 milligrams. 1.5 milligrams is a much smaller quantity than 1500 milligrams; specifically, 1.5 milligrams is 1000 times smaller than 1500 milligrams.
Measures of volume (milliliters) and mass (milligrams) are different. Your 25 milligrams of orange juice is about 25 milliliters of orange juice, but only because 25 milligrams of water equals 25 milliliters of water, and that's about as good as it gets. If you have 25 milligrams of mercury, that amazing liquid metal, you will have a lot less than 25 milliliters because mercuty is over 13 times as dense as water. See the problem? A gallon of water weighs more than a gallon of gasoline, and a gallon of liquid mercury weights much, much more than either the water or gasoline.
25,000 milligrams. There are 1000 grams in a kilogram, and there are 1000 milligrams in a gram. Therefore each kilo is 1,000,000 milligrams.
There are 1000000 milligrams in a kilogram. This means 0.025kgx1,000,000 is 25,000 milligrams.
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The horizon was beautiful. Black holes have an event horizon.
I looked toward the horizon and saw a sunset.
Cigarettes vary by weight as much as 10%. But a single cigarette weighs about 1 gram.
I've smoked Reds, Blues, Oranges and Purples. I think there's whites and maybe yellows as well.
The sun rose in the horizon.Nobody knew what was lurking beyond the horizon.
A fungi or bacterial infection in the bed of the nail can cause the nail to turn orange. Smoking cigarettes frequently can also cause the nails to turn orange.
For example: I looked at where the sea met the horizon. (the horizon is the flat part where the land or sea meets the sky) GLad i could help :) Rae
An orange has about . 1 mg of orange. The vitamin C in an orange will help the body absorb iron supplements if eaten around the same time.
The sun appears bright orange when it is low on the horizon due to the Earth's atmosphere scattering shorter wavelengths of light, such as blue and green, leaving longer wavelengths, like orange and red, to dominate the sky.
"Tar" is the term used to describe the toxic chemicals found in cigarettes. The concentration of tar in a cigarette determines its rating:High-tar cigarettes contain at least 22 milligrams (mg) of tarMedium-tar cigarettes from 15 mg to 21 mgLow-tar cigarettes 7 mg or less of tar
This is a brand of cigarettes that are actually cheaper than most popular brands. It is made with a special blend of tobacco with a rate of .08 mg of nicotine.