There are many examples of extensive properties. Some are mass, energy content, and volume.
Extensive (dependent on the size) and intensive (independent on the size) are terms used generally for physical properties.
The two types of physical properties are intensive and extensive. Intensive properties do not depend on the amount of a substance. An example of an intensive property is density. Extensive properties do depend on the amount of a substance. An example of an extensive property is mass.
An intensive physical property does not depend on the size of the sample. An example of an intensive physical property is density. An extensive physical property does depend on the size of the sample, such as mass and volume.
extensive property depends on on the amount of matter present such as mass, length, or volume
Width is an extensive property.
Extensive
it is an extensive property
an intensive property is the one that is independent from the mass of number of particles in a system while an extensive proeprty depends on them. Energy (e.g. heat) is a property that depend on the mass or the number of particles in a system. In other words, energy is an extensive property.
Generally no. There are some cases where color is due to the structure of the object and not a pigment, and in those it would properly be considered an extensive property. (An example of color as an extensive property would be the shifting colors seen on a thin film of oil: the color depends on the thickness of the film, not on any intrinsic property of the oil itself.)
An extensive property is a property that depends on the size or extent of a system. Examples include mass, volume, and energy.
I consider that the term "use" for an extensive property is not adequate.
Mass is an extensive physical property.