No, liquids take the shape of the container they are in.
Shape is indefinite with liquids as they take the shape of the container they are placed in, conforming to its boundaries. Liquids do not have a fixed shape of their own.
Gases and liquids are both considered fluids because they can flow and take the shape of their container. They can exert pressure on the walls of their container and have molecules that move freely past each other. However, liquids have higher density and are less compressible compared to gases.
They have a definite volume, as they cannot be compressed. However they do not have a definite shape, they will take the shape of whatever they are stored in.
Yes. Liquids can change their shape as they do not have a definite shape and size. They take the shape of a container or jar for example.
The two states of matter that take the shape of their container are gases and liquids. Gases have no fixed shape or volume and will expand to fill any container, while liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container.
Water, or liquids do not have a shape
Liquids and gases have no shape of their own.
Liquids.
Shape is indefinite with liquids as they take the shape of the container they are placed in, conforming to its boundaries. Liquids do not have a fixed shape of their own.
A solid has its own shape and volume. Liquids have their own volume but take the shape of their container, while gases assume the shape and volume of their container.
Liquids.
Liquids.
A solid has a shape of its own. Liquids and gases take the shape of their container.
Liquids do not have their own shape because their particles are not fixed in place; they can move freely and slide past one another. This allows liquids to take the shape of their container, conforming to its boundaries while maintaining a constant volume. Unlike solids, which have a definite shape due to tightly packed particles, liquids adapt to the shape of the space they occupy.
Liquids adopt the shape of the part of the container that they occupy. Gases adopt the entire shape and volume of their container.
Liquids take the shape of the container they are in.
Okay... Whoever wrote this was really stupid. One of the main characteristics of liquid is that it takes the shape of the bottom of it's container. So no, a liquid does not keep it's own shape. If it did, then it would be a solid.