A list of puns related to "Millilitre"
Answers?
I never understood what the measurement means exactly. Say that it rains 190 millilitres a day, what does that mean? Obviously it rains a whole lot more, so where are those 190 mls localized?
anyone know anything about Adven 20mg THC / 10mg CBD full spectrum (Hybrid /indica) OLIVE OIL 30 millilitres.
Because you're a qt.
this isnβt homework itβs for my actual table
So I'm having a real crap time with a heavy period (day 13, averaging almost 2 cups a day) and on day 11 I was off to see my doctor to check on my ultrasound. Turns out I have a pretty heavy lining, which could be build up from missing a period for 90 days - aka still bleeding that sucker out.
ANYWAYS I'm pretty concerned about the volume of bleeding by that time, so I say I'm worried. She asks me how much I've been bleeding and I say well it's 3 PM and I've bled 60ml.
She's like: "Well. It's hard to quantify that in terms of tampons or pads. I wouldnt worry too much though."
Me: okay but from what I've read a regular tampon or pad is soaked at 5ml. So what is that. 12 tampons so far today? And then same for the last 11 days?
..... and she finally gave me a prescription for tranexamic acid.
Heavy bleeding is 1 tampon an hour for several hours. TRY DAYS. LADY.
Anyways I figured the first time I mentioned it (a week prior) that it hadnt seemed urgent enough at the time to warrant a prescription of some sort. And maybe that's still true. But she definitely didnt get how much bleeding i had been doing in terms of measurements on a cup.
Just a FYI always translate your cup measurement into #of tampons.
I swear the only thing I ever see measured in centilitres is alcohol and almost everything up to a litre is measured in millilitres.
Who decided that 500ml is better than 50cl? Or 750ml bottles are better than 75cl?
This will keep me up tonight..
So once again yours truly is accused of "shorting" a count because someone only got "xxx" ml after buying "xxx" grams.
GRAMS AND ML are not the same. Grams are weight, ml is volume. If you have pure water @ 4 Degrees Celsius - 1 gram will weigh 1 ml. If you have a thick oil 1 ml is more like 1.1 grams.
You also have to account for the "ML" you are assuming is exactly 1 ml. There are margins of errors with everything. If a measurement says 1 ml on a syringe that isn't necessarily an exact 1 ml volume. The same thing is true with carts - those are not even marked so no real way to know if it is a tad more or tad less being added. The guns used for loading may have a 1 ml setting but again the margin of error plays a role. Is it a tad more? Is it a touch less?
Also, when you buy three jars from us and see one or two have more in the jar than another --> The correct assumption is the ones with more are over what you bought and not that the lower one is short.
Our process for filling jars are adding in the customers favor 1/2 gram for margin of error on scale, and 1/2 a gram for margin of difference between heated weight and room temperature weight. Then on top of that we toss in an extra gram. After all that we have "oh shit" moments where we go a little heavy. We donβt care if you get more so we leave it. Sometimes even when a bottle is at the end we let it drip out which might add 4-5 grams over. I have sent out 28-30 gram jars for a 20 gram purchase plenty of times. What sux worse is when you get an email saying one jar is short because the other had extra.
But again if you get a 24 gram jar when ordering 20 grams please donβt assume the 22 gram jar is short. :)
<rant over>
Grosse question existentielle, ce matin.
La grand-mère de ma blonde vient de France. Ses livres de cuisine donnent les quantités en grammes plutôt qu'en millilitres, comme ici.
Pourquoi, ici, on a des recettes en millilitres? C'est pas très pratique: quand on a des millilitres, il faut prendre une tasse à mesurer, et c'est pas mal calvaire de mesurer des millilitres de farine, par exemple (et que surtout, la farine peut se tasser, tandis que 200 grammes, c'est toujours 200 grammes, tassé ou pas).
Et un truc qui est bien, c'est qu'avec une balance, on met le plat sur la balance, et on ajoute les ingrédients en remettant la balance à zéro à chaque coup, et on a une quantité précise très rapidement; plus qu'avec une tasse à mesurer...
Alors? Pourquoi est-ce qu'on a des recettes en liquide plutΓ΄t qu'en poids ici?
guy here trying to diet- why do people snicker when I ask stores or restaurants if they have nutritional charts for drink/food items or if I ask how many ounces or millilitres is this beverage? it's as if dieting is perceived as a "feminine" thing, when really it's not ?
i also understand there are cultural notions, where men have to "eat more" than women to be considered macho/masculine
but the whole concept is silly
also, i hate it when people are food pushers, just because i'm a guy and "guys need to eat more"
achieving a caloric deficit is the most important factor that leads to weight loss, and dieting is the best way to reach that caloric deficit
any insights or perspectives ? feel free to share
thanks for reading this post and giving your input, appreciate it ;]
I really do think this is a legitimate question about social norms, perception, and dieting
A teaspoon is coming up as 5.9 ml instead of 5~ (search terms are '1 teaspoon in ml').
I finally have saved up the money to buy a pen anc ink.
I didn't even hear of centilitres until I was 11 years old, it was just millilitres and litres.
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