The best units would be millimetres for the length measurements and millilitres for the volume.
Get a measuring jug that will hold the marbles easily. Half fill the measuring jug with water. Note the volume reading on the measuring Jug scale (measurement A). Add the marbles. Note the new water level reading on the measuring jug scale (measurement B).Subtract measurement A from measurement B, the answer is the volume of the marbles.
Liters, dm3.
A beaker is a container which can also be used as a measuring device for volume. It is not a unit of measurement.
No, the units are independent of the accuracy. If you are measuring volume, how accurate the measurement is (or isn't) will not affect what you are measuring - it will always be volume.
Gram is a measurement of weight. Milliliter (ml) is a measurement of volume
small measurements That depends on what you are measuring. For mass, you may want to use an analytical balance. For volume, a buret or Eppendorf pipette would be useful. Like I said before, it is highly dependent on what your measuring and what the point of the measurement is.
The glassware that provides the most accurate measurement of volume is the measuring cup. A glass measuring cup has lines on it to give an accurate reading.
No a millilitre is a measurement of volume usually used for measuring amounts of liquid. A gram is a measurement of weight.
The measurement of length, width, and height finds the volume of a cube or rectangular prism.
fluid ounces
There is no answer to this unless we know what substance you're measuring. A teaspoon is a measurement of volume, while a pound is a measurement of weight.
It is used in measuring the volume of chemicals