kilograms, grams
The SI unit for the measurement of mass is the 'Kilogram'.
Grams
The appropriate tools for measuring mass include a balance or a scale. These tools provide an accurate measurement of the mass of an object in units such as grams or kilograms.
A scale is a measuring device commonly used to measure mass. It can be digital or mechanical and is designed to give an accurate reading of an object's weight in units such as grams or kilograms.
An objects mass is a direct measurement of its inertia.
This would be an object's mass, which is related to the total number of molecules in the object. When considered in conjunction with gravitational pull, you are measuring the weight of an object (which in physics term is a force rather than a static measure).
Its mass.
The appropriate tools for measuring mass include a balance or a scale. These tools provide an accurate measurement of the mass of an object in units such as grams or kilograms.
A scale is a measuring device commonly used to measure mass. It can be digital or mechanical and is designed to give an accurate reading of an object's weight in units such as grams or kilograms.
the gram
An objects mass is a direct measurement of its inertia.
Three units! There are nearly 50 units for measuring mass. And that is without any of the multitude of metric units: nanogram, microgram, milligram, gram, or intermediate measures. See the Wikipedia link.
it is the scale to find the mass of a thing even liquid and solid
Kilograms and multiples (or fractions) of it.
Exactly the same. Mass is the same everywhere. The weight will be 1/6 less on the moon though.
An object's mass is a measure of the amount of matter it contains, and it can be compared to known masses using a balance scale or other measuring instruments. Mass is commonly measured in units such as kilograms or grams.
This would be an object's mass, which is related to the total number of molecules in the object. When considered in conjunction with gravitational pull, you are measuring the weight of an object (which in physics term is a force rather than a static measure).
The answer will depend on the object that you wish to measure. For example, a balance and some standard masses (wrongly called weights) will be OK for measuring the mass of a few apples but not much use for the mass of an elephant and totally useless for the mass of the sun! In the latter case, the tools are spectroscopy and computers, with physics and mathematics as intellectual tools.
The units for the volume if you are measuring any liquid or solid is metre^3/cm^3 as density = mass/volume. The units for mass is grams