Take the dimensions and figure it out.
Break the object into shapes that you know how to figure the volume of (rectilinear blocks, parallelipeds, tetrahedra, etc) an add the volumes together (don't forget that symmetry can help a lot so you do nto have to figure so many different pieces).
The volume of regular solid can be measured by multiplying the length, is width and its distance.
multiply it Length- Width - Height , or measure the volume of a container of water then stick the object in and measure the volume of the object+water then subtract the volume of the water then you have the volume
1. Measure the dimensions of the solid. 2. Calculate the volume on this geometric base.
You measure its mass and volume and then density = mass/volume.
use a ruler to measure the lenght of each side of the object
Volume of an object is a measure of the space occupied by objects.
Immerse it in water and its volume is equal to the volume of water displaced
To measure the volume of a regular shaped solid object use l x w x h or water displacement. The mass can be found using a Triple Beam Balance.
What do you want to measure - mass, weight, volume, density. There's no answer for "measure" without indicating what is to be measured.
The method for determining the volume of a solid depends on its shape. The volume of a solid object with a regular geometric shape (rectangular box, cube, cylinder, sphere) can be determined using the volume formula for the shape. Because many objects are not regularly shaped their volume cannot be determined using a volume formula. The volume of these objects can be found by water displacement. A volume of water sufficient to cover the object is placed in a graduated cylinder and the volume read. The object is added to the cylinder and the volume read again. The difference between the two volumes is the volume of the object.
cubic meter, m3
To find the volume of a solid you can't simply calculate, get a large tub of water in which you can completely immerse the solid. Fill the tub with water to the edge, then submerge the solid. Any water that spills over has been replaced by the solid and signifies the amount of space the solid is now taking up. Weigh the water or put it in 1l bottles. 1kg of water is 1l and a liter is a cubic decimeter. From there you can calculate the volume in any unit you want.