1 oz is 30ml....so, 10ml would be 1/3 oz (.33oz)
Magnesium sulfide react with water.This is not solubilty and molarity cannot be applied.
1 cl is equal to 10 ml, so 5 cl is equal to 50 ml.
There are approximately 295.7 mL in 10 fluid ounces.
10 cm3 - A cc (cubic centimeter, cm3) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
100mgs is 1 ml
5 ml of water is 1 standard teaspoon.
20 lb times 10 mg equals total dose of 20 X 10 or 200 mg.... 1 ml is 100 mgs 200 mgs is 2 ml....assuming you have given the right data...
You cannot associate weight with volume without knowing the density. If you find this out. Density is mass/volume
there are 30 mls in 1 oz. 5mls in a tsp.
An average volume is anywhere from 2-5mls.
10 cubic centimeters (cc) equals 10 milliliters (ml) or the volume equivalent to 10 grams of pure water.
There are 5mls in one teaspoon, so there would be 20 teaspoons in 100mls.
This cannot be sensibly answered. A milliliter (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, mg is a measure of weight or mass.
10
THERE IS NOT ENOUGH information to figure dosage. 1 oz. = 30 ml indead. However, somewhere on the bottle it must tell you how many mgs. per ml (or cc). Usually it will say something like "10 mg/ 10 ml", or "10 mg per 10 ml. If it was written by the vet and not from the manufactuer, they screwed up and left out some important info. <<ADR>>
Ok First things first....There are 6 tsp. in 1 fl oz.&30 ml = 6 tsp. so there would be 300 ML in 1 FL OZsince 10mg = 1 ml