Volume does not weigh. The two are different characteristics of objects and there is no relationship between them.
You weigh it.
It's a measurement of volume so that depends on the substance.
You weigh it.
110 cc is a volume, so weight would be dependent of density of the substance.
Mass is entirely dependant on volume and substance, how big is the boat and how much does it weigh?
The volume and mass of a substance are independent of the substance itself, but depend upon how much there is of the substance The density of a substance is the relation between how much volume you have of a substance and how much mass that volume has (and vice-versa). It is independent of how much there is of the substance and is thus a characteristic of the substance.
Depends on the substance. A given volume of one substance can weigh more or less than the same volume of another substance.
A litre is a measure of volume not mass. What substance you have a litre of would determine its mass.
Determine the volume of the container, then it can hold that volume of the substance.
A liter is a unit of volume whereas any weight is a unit of mass. To determine how much a volume of any substance weighs, the density of the substance at the current temperature needs to be found. Typically, density is expressed in g/mL. Once the density has been determined, the equation density=mass(grams)/volume(liters) is used to determine the mass or weight of the substance.
If the density of the substance is known, then you can calculate it. Density = Mass/Volume, so Mass = Density x Volume
Weigh it & measure its volume.