Well, water takes the shape of whatever it was held in previously. Unless it wasn't held in anything, (like pouring from a sink) which would then pour itself out and flatten essentially. However it could fill itself into something else.
Hope I understood you question right!
When a gas is poured from a small flask into a large flask, it expands to fill the larger volume of the new container. Unlike liquids and solids, gases have no fixed shape and can compress or expand to occupy the entirety of their surroundings. As a result, the gas will uniformly distribute itself throughout the larger flask, spreading out to maintain consistent pressure and density.
The shape of water changed to fit the shape of the container it was poured into due to its property of taking the shape of its container.
it disloves
When a liquid is poured into a volumetric flask, the liquid will fill the flask up to the calibration mark on the neck, ensuring an accurate volume measurement. In a beaker, the liquid will simply fill the beaker without any specific accuracy in volume measurement. Volumetric flasks are designed for precise volume measurements, while beakers are general-purpose containers for holding liquids.
No, it's the other way around. Water will assume the shape of the vessel it's poured into, but the volume will remain the same.
A Flask is curved in order to conform to shape of a persons hip or jacket pocket where they are typically stored.
conical flask
A liquid is a substance that can be poured and takes the shape of its container.
"liquids"
1. When the flask was placed into the cold water, the colder air molecules in the flask move slower, putting out less pressure. With the decrease in air pressure inside the flask, the now greater pressure outside pushes water into the flask until the pressure inside equals the pressure outside.
The flask shape is significant in chemistry experiments because it allows for efficient mixing of substances and easy observation of reactions. The narrow neck of the flask helps to prevent splashing and allows for controlled pouring of liquids. Additionally, the shape of the flask can affect the rate of reactions and the efficiency of heat transfer during experiments.
As the pipette is far more accurate than a flask by a factor 10 to 100 one should NOT use a volumetric flask except for standard volumes over 100 ml.