A stand. e.g. Three legged stand used in photography to hold the camera steady. Also a table with three legs.
It has definite volume but no definite shape. It takes the shape of the container.
It has definite volume but no definite shape. It takes the shape of the container.
Something that takes the shape of the container it is in. E.g. Water takes the shape of the container which it is in.
No, volume is the amount of space something takes up.
A shape-borrowing object is one that borrows the shape of something else, which means the object takes the shape of something else. P.s anybody know the actual answer please submit your answer
Solid cannot shape of a container but if you look at something like sand it is still a solid though it behaves like a liquid.
Water takes the shape of whatever it surrounds but on the surface it takes on a level shape
No definite shape, it takes the shape of the container
It doesn't! It takes the shape of whatever container you put it in. At least, it takes the shape of the floor of the container.
A liquid takes the shape of any solid that it is contained within. For example water within a square container will appear square, but water within a triangular container will appear triangular.
A liquid has an indefinite shape. It takes the shape of its container.
They all have definite shape ,volume ,and definite mass. A solid is a figure something that doesn't change when you move it like if you move a table out of a classroom it wouldn't. A liquid takes the place of its container.