This question doesn't make sense on it's own, it needs more context to actually be answered.
No, because the volume of a liquid stays the same no matter how big or small of a container you put it in. It will always have the same volume.
Very probable this space is empty, is vacuum.
Volume.
Liquid molecules are very tightly packed while in gas it is loose.
It was Ernest Rutherford who discovered that atoms are mostly composed of empty space with electrons orbiting a very dense nucleus.
4 cups of volume is the same amount of space as one quart of volume. It makes no difference what's in that space. Even if it's empty.
Gases
This is a gas.
The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.
The empty space could be filled with liquid or solid matter.
Volume is the amount of space the liquid takes up.
Volume is the amount of space the liquid takes up.
Very probable this space is empty, is vacuum.
Yes. Gases are very compressible because there is a lot of empty space between the molecules. A liquid has almost no empty space between the molecules. When compressing a gas you are pushing the molecules closer together, getting rid of some of the empty space. Can't do that with liquids. Example 18grams of liquid ware will occupy 18 ml or 0.018 Liter of space (volume). Boil that same 18 grams of water and it will occupy about 24000 ml or 24 Liters of space because in the gas form the same number of molecules are farther apart with lots of empty space between them .
the amount of space occupied by any three-dimensional solid.
The amount of empty space in the Universe, between galaxies, is many times larger than the amount of space occupied by galaxies. This ratio depends on what part of the Universe you are looking at. For example, our galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years; the closest larger galaxy (M31) is at a distance of about 2.5 million light-years. However, that's just the Local Group; from the Local Group to another galaxy cluster, there is even more empty space.
It has a different amount of space between molecules
Yes, a liquid does take up a definite amount of space, which is to say that it has a definite volume. A liquid takes the shape of its container but does not expand to fill it completely like a gas would.