Asked by Cheyenne
I Know...I Am Such An Idiot For Posting So Many On One Subject.
But Heres The Thing:::
0.2 mg = ? g
..Searched it and it came up 0.0002,Anybody know another way to find the question out?..
8.6 kg = ? g
..Searched it and it came up 0.0086,Know a different way?..
800 g = ? mg
..Came up 800 000,Another way?..
1.7 kg = ? g
..Came up 1700,another way?..
But Heres The Thing:::
0.2 mg = ? g
..Searched it and it came up 0.0002,Anybody know another way to find the question out?..
8.6 kg = ? g
..Searched it and it came up 0.0086,Know a different way?..
800 g = ? mg
..Came up 800 000,Another way?..
1.7 kg = ? g
..Came up 1700,another way?..
Answers
Answered by
MathMate
One kilogram has 1000 grams.
So to convert from grams to kilograms, divide by 1000.
Same goes between grams and milligrams.
To convert milligrams to grams, divide by 1000.
So to convert from grams to kilograms, divide by 1000.
Same goes between grams and milligrams.
To convert milligrams to grams, divide by 1000.
Answered by
Cheyenne
So just divide all by 1000?
Answered by
MathMate
Dr. Bob has posted a rule that you can easily follow to know if you should divide or multiply, and also how much to divide/multiply.
In the case of the present converions, you go up the table three lines, so you divide by 1000. Other cases may differ. Follow his rules, which I take the liberty to reproduce below:
(extracted from http://www.jiskha.com/display.cgi?id=1253152034)
"Here is a mnemonic to help with metric conversions.
kilo
hecto
deka
gram(or other unit)
deci
centi
milli
You need two rules to use the table. Going down the table move the decimal point to the right. Going up the table move the decimal point to the left.
1.2 kg to grams. Move down 1 to hecto, a second to deka, and a third to gram. So we move the decimal point three places to the right.
1.2 kg = 1200 grams.
4,000 mg to grams.
Start at milli, move 1 place to centi, a second to deci and a third to gram.
4,000 mg = 4.000 g"
In the case of the present converions, you go up the table three lines, so you divide by 1000. Other cases may differ. Follow his rules, which I take the liberty to reproduce below:
(extracted from http://www.jiskha.com/display.cgi?id=1253152034)
"Here is a mnemonic to help with metric conversions.
kilo
hecto
deka
gram(or other unit)
deci
centi
milli
You need two rules to use the table. Going down the table move the decimal point to the right. Going up the table move the decimal point to the left.
1.2 kg to grams. Move down 1 to hecto, a second to deka, and a third to gram. So we move the decimal point three places to the right.
1.2 kg = 1200 grams.
4,000 mg to grams.
Start at milli, move 1 place to centi, a second to deci and a third to gram.
4,000 mg = 4.000 g"
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.