Usually, yes. Most of the time the solid form is denser and therefore occupies a smaller volume than the liquid, but for a few substances the reverse is true.
No it doesn't change its volume
By cooling the liquid.
the answer is liquid... as my science teacher says.
A gas can change shape but it doesn't change volume, a liquid also changes shape but doesn't change volume.
You can change the shape of a liquid by pouring it into a different container, and you can change its volume by adding more liquid or removing some. Heating or cooling the liquid can also affect its volume by expanding or contracting it.
When a liquid is turned into a gas maybe by heating the volume of that liquid has been increased.
You can't change volume of a liquid. But only gas it's easy to change
The shape can change, the volume will stay the same.
The change in volume from gaseous air to liquid air is about 1/600th of the original volume. This significant reduction in volume is due to the compressibility of gases at high pressures and low temperatures during the liquefaction process.
No, the amount of a liquid is volume. Density is independent of volume.
a liquid
liquid