Converting from litres to millilitres you move the decimal 3 places to the right as the number is getting 1000 times bigger (multiply by 1000)
8 litres is equal to 8,000 millilitre's, so 8 litres is more that 7,999 millilitre's.
This is an extremely confused question. Presumably, you are asking: how many millilitres (ml) are equivalent to two litres (l). Once phrased in that way it is very easy to answer. One litre (l) = 10 decilitres (dl) = 100 centilitres (cl) = 1000 millilitres (ml)
We can find the answer mathematically as follows:The average coffee mug is 3.5 inches in diameter and 4-5 inches tall, this gives it a maximum capacity to hold 48 cubic inches of liquid (5 x (PI x 3.52)). Next let's see which of these two quantities will fit in this mug. First, let's try 3 liters. Since, 1 liter equals 61 cubic inches, three liters will takes up 183 cubic inches - that's enough to fill almost four of our coffee mugs. That leaves us with our correct answer of 300 milliliters which equals 18.3 cubic inches, which is well within the maximum capacity of an average coffee mug. So, 300 milliliters is a possible capacity for a coffee mug.We could also solve this problem analytically. Since, we know that most soda comes in a two-liter bottle, we can compare the liquid in one and a half of those bottles with the size of a coffee mug. It is obvious from holding the two side-by-side that an average coffee mug could never hold three liters. This way we can deductively single out the correct answer: 300 milliliters.
Oh, dude, 1.5 liters is just 1,500 cubic centimeters. It's like converting your regular-sized drink to a tiny, tiny measurement. So, next time someone asks you for a sip of their 1.5-liter soda, just tell them it's 1,500 cubic centimeters of pure refreshment.
When you move the slide away from you on a microscope stage, the image on the microscope will appear to move in the opposite direction, towards you. This is due to the way the lenses in the microscope invert and magnify the image.
Oh, dude, seriously? There are 2300 milliliters in 2.3 liters. It's like the metric system's way of making things unnecessarily complicated. So, next time you spill your 2.3 liters of soda, just remember that's 2300 mL of sticky mess to clean up.
One fiftieth or two hundredths The other way round there are 50 x 0.020 = 1
The liter is the larger unit. There are 1000 milliliters (ml) in a liter. 1 ml = 0.001 liters Remember K H D | d c m (kilo, hecto, deka, (liter, meter, gram), deci, centi, milli). Liters are three places to the left of milliliters. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the left. You will get 1 mL = .001 L. And a funny way to remember it is: King Henry Drinks One Dark Chocolate Milk.
You don't convert any meters to milliliters. Meters to millimeters, liters to milliliters. Either way, multiply by 1000. 112 m = 112000 mm
To move the decimal you must move the decimal in the divisor all the way to the right to make it a whole number. Then in the dividend, you move that decimal to the right the same amount of spaces you did in the divisor.
no, because 1.5 littlers is way smaller then the other one.
Left
Left.
If you have a fraction, divide the top by the bottom to get the decimal. If you have a decimal, move the decimal point 2 places that way --> to get the percent. If you have percent, move the decimal point 2 places this way <-- to get the decimal.
Oh honey, 0.65 liters is just another way of saying 650 milliliters. So next time you see a decimal point, just move it over to the right three places and voilà, you've got your answer. Keep calm and convert on, darling!
If you have a decimal, move the decimal point two places that way ---> to get percent.
Left or right.