It will not affect the mass in any way whatsoever.
the freezing temperature of the liquid, the container it is in, the surface are exposed to the colder mass, the original temperature of the liquid before being exposed to the colder mass, the denseness of the liquid.
Sure. Other things being equal, you need more energy to raise the temperature of a larger mass of liquid.
the rate of mass thrnsfer can be affected higher in gases, slower in liquid and it is not affected in solid
The only way that the mass can change is if matter is added or taken away. The volume of a liquid can increase if heated, such as the liquid inside of a thermometer. The thermometer is sealed and no liquid gets in or out, so the mass of the liquid is unchanged. But when the temperature goes up, the liquid expands and is forced to go up the thermometer.
Temperature can affect the mass of something and also freezing the object.
Two factors which determine the rate of diffusion of a liquid in another liquid include temperature and particle size. The higher the temperature, the faster diffusion takes place, and the smaller the particle, the faster diffusion takes place.
Temperature has no effect on molar mass
Yes, the higher the temperature, the faster materials dissolve in the given liquid
Yes, the size (volume and mass) and the type of the cup will affect its temperature
depends but yes probaly
what is "this" supposed to mean
No. That would violate the Newtonian principle of Conservation of Mass.