Volume
mass
area
Latest correction: Of these, only volume is correct. Area is not space, and mass has nothing to do with occupied space. Two objects of different volume can have identical masses, and two objects of different mass can have the same volume. The only true statement that can be made between the two is that all objects with a measurable bounded volume have mass. That is why the only possible answer is Volume
Matter occupies space and has mass. As such, the amount of matter present in a substance will determine its mass as well as its volume.
No, for a substance to be considered matter it must have both mass and volume. Volume refers to the amount of space an object occupies, while mass refers to the amount of matter in the object. So, any substance that has volume also has mass.
Volume of all matter is measured in cubic centimeters. Mass is measured in grams. The property of matter that is measured in cubic centimetres is volume. It is a measurement of the amount of space a substance occupies.
Volume
Matter does.
The amount of space that matter in an object occupies is its volume.
Matter occupies space and has mass. As such, the amount of matter present in a substance will determine its mass as well as its volume.
mass is the total amount of matter present in a substance while its volume is the space which the matter occupies.
The amount of space that matter occupies is its volume.
No, for a substance to be considered matter it must have both mass and volume. Volume refers to the amount of space an object occupies, while mass refers to the amount of matter in the object. So, any substance that has volume also has mass.
The amount of space that matter occupies is its volume.
matter
an object
Any substance which occupies space and has a mass.
For pedantic reasons, I'd say "false". Volume is just a measure of three-dimensional space, regardless of whether it has any matter in it or not.
Anything that takes up space and has mass is called matter.
The amount of space that matter in an object occupies is known as its volume. This volume is a measure of how much physical space an object takes up and is typically measured in cubic units such as cubic centimeters or cubic meters.