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2006-12-06 09:55:21 · 8 answers · asked by angie e 1 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

8 answers

1 and what an incredible coincidence that they are equal.
What's the odds of that.
How did you ever come up with that question.

2006-12-06 10:16:26 · answer #1 · answered by Ben 2 · 0 1

If you are talking about water, 1 ml of water is equivalent to 1 cc. Other materials will have higher or lower densities, but I'm assuming they mean for water for which 1 ml = 1 cm^3.

2006-12-06 17:59:40 · answer #2 · answered by Puzzling 7 · 4 0

One milliliter is one cubic centimeter. Think of it like this... you measure distance with a line. You measure area with two lines crossing each other and you measure volume(like mL) by using three lines.

lenght or distance = one line, like a rule 10 to the first
Area or a side = two lines, like a tile on the floor 10 to the second
Volume = 3 lines, like cup, or measurement of liquid 10 to the third

To complicated. Well, with the metric system, things like liters, meters, and grams everything is realated to the number "10"

1 cm x 1 cm = 1 squared cm

volume like mL can be found as

1 cm x 1 cm x 1 cm = 1 cm cubed, or 1 mL

2006-12-06 18:03:53 · answer #3 · answered by Heero Yui 3 · 0 1

a cc is the same as a ml

USA uses cc measurement
AUS uses ml measurement

2006-12-06 17:59:05 · answer #4 · answered by trueblue_aussieacdc 2 · 2 1

1 cc = 1 ml

Edit:
I just chanced on all the weird answers & comments.

The DEFINITION OF a milliliter is one cubic centimeter. It is the basis for the entire vulumetric portion of the metric system.

2006-12-06 17:57:21 · answer #5 · answered by Helmut 7 · 2 1

69

2006-12-06 18:12:54 · answer #6 · answered by Danny 1 · 0 1

1cc=1ml

2006-12-06 17:58:37 · answer #7 · answered by raj 7 · 0 1

They are equivalent

2006-12-06 17:57:36 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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