A gas. Gases can be compressed and shaped differently. Liquids can change shape, but are tough to compress. Solids have definite shapes and volumes.
The state of matter that has no definite shape or volume is a gas.
Yes it has neither.
The gas is the state of matter which do not have definite volume because it occupy all the space which is provided to it and the shape of container in which it is kept.
If it's solid then it has both. If it's liquid then it has volume but not shape. If it's gas then it has neither.
The solid phase of matter has a definite volume and shape. Gas form has neither volume, nor shape, and liquid form has volume, but conforms to the shape of the container it is put in.
The state of matter that has a definite shape but not a definite volume is a solid. Solids have a fixed shape due to the arrangement of particles, but they can still be compressed or expanded slightly.
Yes, some matter can have a definite volume but not a definite shape. This is characteristic of liquids, which maintain a fixed volume but take the shape of their container. In contrast, solids have both definite volume and shape, while gases have neither. Thus, liquids exemplify matter that has a definite volume without a definite shape.
Gas.
A Gas has neither a fixed Volume or Shape.
Liquids and solids are the states of matter that occupy a definite volume. Gases have neither a definite volume nor shape.
The three principal states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas. Solids have a fixed shape and volume, liquids have a definite volume but take the shape of their container, and gases have neither a definite shape nor volume.
A: Solid - A solid has definite shape and volume. - A liquid has definite volume, but not definite shape. - A gas has neither definite volume nor definite shape.