No. They take the shape of the container they are in and their volume can be changed if they are compressed
Liquids have a definite volume and take the shape of their container, while gases have neither a definite volume nor shape, filling the entire space available to them. Gases are compressible, while liquids are not. Additionally, gases exhibit lower intermolecular forces compared to liquids.
Solids have a definite shape and volume, while liquids have a definite volume but take the shape of their container. Gases have neither a definite shape nor volume and expand to fill their container.
False. Gases in a container take the shape of the container. The volume of a gas increases with temperature and inversely with pressure, except when in a closed container where volume remains the same as the volume of the container and the temperature and pressure will vary.
Gases adopt the form of the container it contains an hasn't a constant volume.. A liquid adopt the form of the container it contains but has a constant volume. A solid has form and constant volume.
A gas takes the shape of its container and has no definite volume, as it expands to fill the available space.
liquid
Type your answer here... solid
No
A gas has no definitive volume or shape.
Liquid
solid
liquid
Liquid
I can only tell you that gases are does not have a difinite shape and volume . E.g air / nitrogen / carbon dioxide / water vapour / . . .
A gas does not have a definite shape or volume.
- solids have a shape and a volume- liquids have a volume but not a shape- gases haven't shape or volume (in free form)
Solids have definite shape and definite volume. Liquids have not definite shape but have definite volume. Gases have neither definite shape not definite volume.