Instant · Precise · Universal
47 units available
6 categories total
To mL: multiply by 5.919. To US teaspoons: multiply by 1.201. To metric teaspoons: multiply by 1.184.
1 UK tsp ≈ 5.919 mL. Approximately 1.2 times the US teaspoon (4.929 mL).
For example, 1 Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK)) = 1.420137e-15 Cubic Mile (mi³).
| Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK)) | Cubic Mile (mi³) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 1.420137e-16 |
| 0.5 | 7.100686e-16 |
| 1 | 1.420137e-15 |
| 2 | 2.840274e-15 |
| 5 | 7.100686e-15 |
| 10 | 1.420137e-14 |
| 25 | 3.550343e-14 |
| 50 | 7.100686e-14 |
| 100 | 1.420137e-13 |
| 500 | 7.100686e-13 |
| 1000 | 1.420137e-12 |
The UK teaspoon is a unit of culinary volume equal to approximately 5.919 milliliters, slightly larger than its US counterpart.
1 UK tsp ≈ 5.919 mL. Approximately 1.2 times the US teaspoon (4.929 mL).
To mL: multiply by 5.919. To US teaspoons: multiply by 1.201. To metric teaspoons: multiply by 1.184.
Traditional British recipes, Commonwealth cooking, and older pharmaceutical dosing in the UK.
The UK teaspoon is about 20% larger than the US teaspoon. A recipe calling for 5 UK teaspoons would need 6 US teaspoons.
Assuming UK and US teaspoons are the same — the UK teaspoon is about 20% larger. This matters in precise baking.
Modern UK recipes increasingly use metric (5 mL teaspoons). When following older UK recipes, a UK tsp ≈ 6 mL.
The cubic mile is an imperial unit of volume equal to a cube one mile on each side, used for extremely large geological and astronomical volumes.
1 mi³ = 5,280³ ft³ ≈ 1.47198 × 10¹¹ ft³ = 4.168 × 10¹² L ≈ 4.168 km³.
To km³: multiply by 4.16818. To liters: multiply by 4.168 × 10¹². To cubic meters: multiply by 4.168 × 10⁹.
Expressing enormous natural volumes like oceans, ice caps, and large geological formations in English-speaking contexts.
The volume of Earth is about 260 billion mi³. Lake Superior holds about 2,900 mi³ of water — the largest freshwater lake by surface area.
The conversion factor cubes dramatically: 1 mi = 1.609 km, but 1 mi³ = 4.168 km³ (1.609³). Always cube the linear factor.
One cubic mile holds enough water to fill about 1.1 trillion US gallons. It helps to think of it as roughly 4.2 km³.



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