Of course, any material occupe space.
Yes, sugar granules do occupy space. They have mass and take up physical volume, even though they may appear small individually. When sugar granules are poured into a container, they fill up the space within that container based on their size and shape.
A stone has a solid mass and does occupy space.
yes,smoke does have mass and it does occupy space
Heat is a form of energy. It can be transmitted through space but it does not occupy space.
Light is a form of energy and energy does not occupy space.
when heat occupieses space,the particles of heat are moving around in the space that they occupy
Heat doesn't occupy space.
Objects have mass and occupy space. Persons have mass and occupy space.
Yes, liquid does occupy space. All matter (liquids, solids, gas, etc) occupy space.
No. With large objects it is easy to see that they cannot occupy the same space. Smaller objects can appear as if they can occupy the same space but, at the molecular level they cannot. For example, you can dissolve sugar in a glass of water and it looks as if they are both occupying the same shape - but they are not. At the sub-atomic level, the Pauli exclusion principle prevents objects (electrons) occupying the same space.
No, all forms of matter do have mass and occupy space.
If you mean "Does air occupy space?" then yes it does when we compress air it takes space.. but when its not compressed we may not feel it but it still does take up space..