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
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.
Any liquid has a definite volume but no definite shape.
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".
What is the metric unit for liquid volume of a sink
litrer is the unit for liquid in metric system. and cubic meter in SI unit.
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.
litre
Liters
It is a litre.
Liters are the metric unit for liquid volume or more strictly dm3. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The litre (symbol L or l, the first is preferred) is not a true SI-unit; it is only an "accepted" unit of volume. 1 cubic metre (symbol m3, the SI unit) has 1 000 litres.