when measuring small quantities of liquids.
Milliliters (mL) is the metric unit for volume. It is used in every country other than the USA and used in all scientific contexts (even in the USA).
It is not. I buy milk by the litre, fruit juices by the litre, petrol by the litre. Most pops are sold by the litre.
A milliliter (ml) is a derived metric measurement unit of volume.
The volume of water is 118 mL, since the mass and volume of water are equivalent at room temperature.
Liters are the metric unit for liquid volume or more strictly dm3. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The litre (symbol L or l, the first is preferred) is not a true SI-unit; it is only an "accepted" unit of volume. 1 cubic metre (symbol m3, the SI unit) has 1 000 litres.
When you are measureing smaller units you would use mL
Milliliters (mL) is the metric unit for volume. It is used in every country other than the USA and used in all scientific contexts (even in the USA).
There are many abbreviations in each measurement system that represents a unit of volume. In the English system the preferred units are ounce (oz.), quart (qtr.) and gallon (gal), while metric the preferred units are milliliter(ml) and liter (l).
No. mg is a unit of weight. ml is a unit of volume.
It is not. I buy milk by the litre, fruit juices by the litre, petrol by the litre. Most pops are sold by the litre.
A milliliter (ml) is a derived metric measurement unit of volume.
You don't because mL is not a conventional unit. If you meant ml, it is a volume unit and cannot be converted to a length unit.
Impossible to convert a length unit (mm) to a volume unit (ml).
Centimeter is a unit of length, mL is a unit of volume !
The volume of water is 118 mL, since the mass and volume of water are equivalent at room temperature.
Liters are the metric unit for liquid volume or more strictly dm3. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The litre (symbol L or l, the first is preferred) is not a true SI-unit; it is only an "accepted" unit of volume. 1 cubic metre (symbol m3, the SI unit) has 1 000 litres.
A Milliliter? It's a unit of volume.