Water vapour does not have definite shape and does not have definite volume.
Gas doesn't have a definite volume. Liquid has a definite volume but not shape. Solid has a definite shape and volume.
It has a definite volume but no definite shape it change based on the container it's in.
Obviously, the liquid phase has definite volume but indefinite shape as it is normally observed that when liquid water is poured in a glass, it adopts the shape of glass prior to any change in volume.
No. It takes the shape of it's container.So does a gas.Only a solid has a definite shape and size.____________________________WRONG! The answer is YES. A liquid may not have a definite shape, but it has a definite volume. If you had 10 mL of water in a cup, and you spilled it all on the floor, on the floor is still 10 mL of water, no? So yes to the volume, and no to the shape.____________________________Lol, seems to me you mean yes and no. But, the answer is actually no, since it does not have definite volume AND definite shape. It only has definite volume, since for shape, it takes the shape of its container.
Water vapour does not have definite shape and does not have definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
Water (as a liquid) has a definite volume but no shape; a gas hasn't a definite volume or shape.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
Because the particles can't move the object can't move which give it the shape and volume
water
Water does not have a definate shape or volume because it takes the shape of any container it is put into.
By immersing it in water and noting the volume of water displaced.
Archimedes took a bowl full of water of known volume and then dipped the irregular shape body. Amount of water fall down is measured and is the volume of that body.