For medicine
A standard medicine dropper typically holds about 1 milliliter (mL) of liquid, but this can vary depending on the design. Some droppers may have a capacity of up to 3 mL. The amount it can hold is usually marked on the dropper or specified in its product details. Always check the specifications for the exact capacity of a specific dropper.
Medicine dropper water top top of a checker the opening of a electric plug
We don't know how many lines there are on the dropper all together. 1 cc is the same as 1 mL. So 1 cc is 1/3rd of the full 3-mL dropper.
One milliliter (ml) is a small volume, equivalent to a cubic centimeter (cc). Common objects that approximate this volume include a standard medicine dropper or a small teaspoon, which holds about 5 ml but can easily dispense 1 ml. Additionally, a single cube of an ice tray can often hold around 1 ml of water. It's a volume typically used in cooking, medicine, and scientific measurements.
USE TO DROP SMALL LIQUID OBJECTS TO ESTIMATE THE mL OR GRAMS . THAT IS THE USE OF THE DROPPER ...............MABUHAY LAHAT ng LINHSIANS .............INHALE""""" TEACHER:OXYGEN kaba? STUDENT: ABA SYEMPRE
You're being flipping stoopid again - you don't mean the capacity of the dropper (wBTW - pr^2L) you mean the volume of a drop. The volume of a drop in technical terms is a drop.
It depends on the eye dropper, to find out how much your specific eyedropper holds count the number of times it takes to empty a 100ml beaker using it. Divide the amount of water in the beaker by the number of times it took to empty it and you will have a rough approximation of how many mL your eye dropper will hold. A standard small bottle with dropper - one suck which fills the dropper to about 2/3 of its height should be 1 ml.
Each dose would be 2.5 ml, which means each dose would require 80 drops (2.5 ml * 32 drops/ml).
A teaspoon holds 'about' 5 ml, so the spoon would need to be 1/5 full - but, for such a small amount of medicine it would be safer to use a pippette (dropper) where you would be able to measure 1 ml more accurately.
5 ml is about a teaspoon. 5 ml = 1.01442068 US teaspoons
Each dose from a 15 ml container would be 4 ml (15 ml / 60 doses). Given that 1 ml equals 32 drops, each dose would contain 128 drops (4 ml * 32 drops).
One milliliter (ml) is approximately equivalent to 20 drops from a standard dropper, though this can vary depending on the dropper's design and the viscosity of the liquid. Therefore, if you're measuring in a standard dropper, 1 ml would typically fill about 20 drops. Always check the specific dropper you are using for the most accurate measurement.