0 a unit of measurement of liquid equal to 0.01 of a litre
The scale on this measuring jug shows millilitres rather than centilitres.
If you want to convert litres to centilitres, you multiply by 100.
The insulin is supplied from the manufacturer in 10-centilitre bottles.
The abbreviation 'cl' stands for centilitres.
Why doesn't the recipe just say 2 litres, instead of 200 centilitres?
The excise duty per centilitre of pure alcohol would be about 10·2p for a typical beer or table wine, arid 17·35p for spirits.
Would it not be far more sensible to use existing carafes of whatever size and mark them in whatever number of centilitres is desired?
Certainly poor fellows like me would have greater understanding if it was, shall we say, rounded to a figure of 50 centilitres.