That's 0 milligrams. 0 magnesium would be "0 Mg" (pay attention to capitalisation). Or even "0mg Mg".
20 0 ReplyBut but but 0 Mg would mean 0 megagrams! Capitalization doesn't fix the ambiguity!!1!
13 0 Reply0mg is unambiguous. 0Mg has the two options. The issue is just that the OP is wrong (well, partially right but not what they wanted).
4 0 Reply
0 milligrams of magnesium.
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people are focused on other wrong things but.... the past participle of run is run
https://homework.study.com/explanation/what-is-the-past-participle-of-run.html
14 0 ReplyYeah it's seriously upsetting.
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0 milligrams or 0 Magnesium?
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Instead of arguing about 0Mg vs 0mg - use the best of both and upset everyone: 0ᴍg
8 0 Replyyouve heard of uppercase and lowercase, meet middlecase
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0mg or 0mg?
6 0 ReplyOmg, 0mg o' Mg
7 0 ReplyYes
2 0 ReplyCholesterol?
2 0 ReplyA long time ago I bought a generic brand chip just because it had 0mg Cholesterol! in bold print on the front. They were awful to eat but the picture was worth a few hundred likes on Twitter (Currently known as Elon Musk's X) back then.
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While we're intentionally avoiding the joke, a space should be placed between the number and the unit, preferably a non-breaking one.
4 0 ReplyThat's deadly isn't it
1 0 ReplyMg: 0 mg
IUPAC convention needs a space between number and unit. You can only omit the space for % or degrees.
1 0 Reply♻️
1 0 Reply