liquid,gas,and solid
gas
Water does not have a definate shape or volume because it takes the shape of any container it is put into.
A gas or a plasma takes on the entire size (volume) and shape of its container. A liquid takes the shape of its container but always has a definite size (volume) and may not completely fill its container.
No Liquid does not have a distinctive shape, but it takes the shape of the container it is placed in.
Crude oil is a liquid, so it takes the shape of whatever container it is in.
a liquid
liquid,gas,and solid
liquid, gasliquid and gas
Both a gas and a liquid will take the shape of its container.
A gas takes on the shape of the container it is in and expands to fill the whole container.
Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter (with solid, liquid and plasma being the other states). It has the distinction of taking both the shape and the volume of the container that it is in. If you want to include plasma, that too will expand - acting like a gas. So will supercritical fluids which might be considered gases by some definitions, but not by others..
a fluid
Liquid
...container.
Of its container? Liquids and gasses.
gases and liquids
gases and liquids