Liters and milliliters are the units used most often to express the volume of liquids.
Most liquids will expand when heated up.
A milliliter is a measure of volume. Therefore, you can characterize the volume of anything in milliliters. Most often, however, one measures the volume of liquids using milliliters.
If density = mass/volume, and your volume increases while mass remains the same... Then the denominator increases which would decrease the density
When water freezes, it expands in volume; most liquids decrease in volume when they freeze.
I assume your question deals with expansion in volume under conditions of heating and / or cooling. I believe that most liquids expand in volume when they are heated and contract in volume when they are cooled. Water does not follow this pattern entirely - it expands when it is cooled from a liquid state to a solid state.
"liter"
liquids= ml. solids= mg.
Any liquids, especially petrol (gasoline), milk and fruit juice. Don't forget Vodka Most cans of pop are measured in ml (millilitres). Large bottles of pop are usually sold in 2 or 3 litre bottles. Although all liquids can be measured in litres, it depends on how much of it there is. 1000 litres is a cubic metre (m3 )
Liquids held at a constant temperature definitely doen't have a definite shape but a it most certainly has a definite volume.
Liquids held at a constant temperature definitely doen't have a definite shape but a it most certainly has a definite volume.
liquids conduct electricity because if you think about it they don't have a definite volume or shape and some liquids are not transparent so the answer would be that they conduct electricity
In general when temperature is decreased the volume decreases and the density increases. This is not true for water around freezingg temperatures, the volume increases and the density decreases and ice floats.