Yes. This is the liquid's 'volume'.
The density of a liquid is another subject:
Density= Mass/Volume
But this is unrelated to the space the liquid occupies.
Yes all materials occupy space. Any liquid is no different and also does.
they all take up space
They are all matter they all have mass and all take up space
they all take up space and all have matter, mass, and weight
Yes, liquid does occupy space. All matter (liquids, solids, gas, etc) occupy space.
solid and liquid because gas doesn't take up space it just floats away
gases tend to take up the entire space they are given. if a little is in a large area, density will be low, but even throughout the entire area its given. it will also cause suction. if there is a lot in a small area, it will be high density, and will add a lot of outward pressure to its container. basically, gasses do take up space, but they will move to accept other objects, and take up all of the space they are given. so, the i guess the answer is: all of it, but none of it. hope that helped ^^
Liquid matter typically takes up more space than solid matter because the particles in a liquid are not as closely packed together as in a solid. This is why liquids have a fixed volume but can take the shape of their container.
I believe they recycle water from their urine and sweat and all other liquid excreted into drinking water.
A solid does take up space. Although it doesn't take up as much mass if it were to be a liquid or a gas.For example ice doesn't take up as much space as water or water vapor 123456789
The surface area of a space figure is the total area of all the faces of the figure
All three do.