liquid
liquid
A solid has a definite shape but the same volume in any container.
A substance that keeps the same volume but takes the shape of its container is known as a liquid. Liquids have a fixed volume but can move and adjust to the shape of the container they are in.
The state of matter that keeps the same volume but changes shape when it changes container is a liquid. Liquids do not have a fixed shape but take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and fill the container.
A solid will remain the same volume and shape A liquid will remain the same volume but change shape to its container A gas will expand its volume to fill its container entirely
shape but not the volume
The state of matter that has definite volume, but indefinite shape is the liquid state. A solid constantly has the same shape and volume. A wooden block (solid) will not change its shape or volume unless it is melted, but that would involve changing it from solid to liquid. A liquid constantly has the same volume, but its shape changes. Find a cylindrical container that has the same volume as a rectangular container. Fill the cylindrical container with water. Then, pour the water to the rectangular container. The shape of the water changed from cylindrical to rectangular and the volume remained the same, unless some water was dropped in the process. A gas has changing shape and volume. Find a small container full of a colored gas. Open in it inside a room. The gas will spread all over the room. Its volume changed from the volume of the container to the size of the room. Its shape has changed from the shape of the container to the shape of the room.
False. Gases in a container take the shape of the container. The volume of a gas increases with temperature and inversely with pressure, except when in a closed container where volume remains the same as the volume of the container and the temperature and pressure will vary.
The volume of a sample of liquid is fixed, but may expand or contract with heat. The shape of a liquid is defined by its container. In the absence of gravity, liquids outside a container will assume a generally spherical shape.
The volume and shape of a gas are determined by its volume and shape of its container.
Well, honey, the volume of the liquid stays the same no matter what shape container you pour it into. It's like trying to fit into a new pair of Spanx - your size doesn't change, just the way it's all squished in there. So, whether it's a cylinder, a cube, or a unicorn-shaped container, that liquid ain't gonna magically multiply or disappear.
neither the shape nor the volume