Yes, I couldn't have said it better myself :)
Hard vacuum, absent any matter, also possesses the property of volume.
Mass is the amount of matter in an object, and volume is the amount of space something takes up (example, air takes up space)
Volume
VOLUME.
Yes. volume is a measure of how much space a sample of matter takes up!
No volume is how much space an object takes up. Mass is the measure of the amount of matter in an object.
The amount of space that matter in an object occupies is known as its volume. This volume is a measure of how much physical space an object takes up and is typically measured in cubic units such as cubic centimeters or cubic meters.
Matter is defined as something that has mass and takes up space. Mass is defined as the amount of matter something contains. Since these two definitions run into each other, what exactly - without use of the corrasponding words
The properties that describe how much space an object takes up are volume, density, and mass. Volume measures the amount of space an object occupies, density is the mass per unit volume of an object, and mass is the amount of matter in an object.
Density is how tightly packed the matter in a substance is. Therefore, how much space it takes up (volume) will not affect this.
The measure of the amount of space that matter takes up is called volume. Volume is the quantity that expresses how much three-dimensional space a substance or object occupies. It is commonly measured in cubic units such as cubic meters or cubic centimeters.
mass is how much space an object takes up, weight is how much gravity is being applied to the area and volume is how much matter you can put into the object.
Volume is the amount of space occupied by an object, measured in cubic units like liters or cubic meters. Mass, on the other hand, is the amount of matter in an object, measured in units like grams or kilograms. In simple terms, volume describes the space an object takes up, while mass describes the amount of material in that object.