litres and millilitres
Milliliters, sometimes liters
The liquid density is the mass of the liquid per unit volume, typically expressed in grams per milliliter (g/mL). It provides a measure of how much mass is contained within a specific volume of the liquid.
Density is mass per unit volume ie the mass of an object divided by its volume: density = mass/volume So if the mass is measured in kilograms (kg) amd the volume in cubic metres (m-3) the density is given in units of kg.m-3 It makes no difference to the definition if the object is a solid, liquid or a gas. See http://www.zyra.org.uk/density.htm http://physics.about.com/od/fluidmechanics/f/density.htm
Any liquid has a definite volume but no definite shape.
Density is the ratio of an object's mass divided by its volume. The standard international unit to measure density is kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3). Whether it is a liquid or solid or gas makes no difference.
Milliliters is the SI unit of a liquid volume
the unit for volume, for a liquid would be oz(ounces) I believe..
The unit of liquid volume in the metric system is the liter (L).
The main unit for liquid is Liter
There is really no such thing as a "liquid" unit. The unit of measure is for the VOLUME of something. The best unit for measuring the volume of a human bathtub would be the "Litre".
litrer is the unit for liquid in metric system. and cubic meter in SI unit.
What is the metric unit for liquid volume of a sink
litre
Liters
It is a litre.
No. Beakers measure liquid volume. Millimeters is not a unit of volume, and especially not a unit of liquid volume. Beakers usually measure in a fraction of a liter, such as a milliliter.
The smallest unit of liquid volume in the apothecary system is the minim. It is approximately equal to one drop.