Both. A liter is 1000 milliliters. 1 milliliter = one cubic cm of a solid. so 1 liter of sand is equivalent to 1000 cm3 of sand or 10 cubic meters.
it could be C or D if your mercury is liquid it would be C if your mercury is solid it would be D
No, the ratio of the volumes of two similar solid polyhedra is equal to the cube of the ratio between their edges. The volume of a solid object is proportional to the cube of its linear dimensions, not the square root.
Take the 5 litres or liquid solid or gas and put it into the 5 litre container.
It is the surface area of the solid.
Vol = 3 cm * 2 cm * 2 cm = 12cm3 = 12 millilitres.
Liters and any denomination of liters are a unit of volume. The definition of matter includes that it has to take up space - volume. So you can indeed use liters and milliliters to measure the volume of a solid. However, the alternative is to use meters (cubed) and any denomination of meters to represent volume. You could say that something is 1.00 liters or you could say that the same thing is 1000 cm3.
milliliters are liquid, grams are solid. you either want milligrams or liters
Milliliters and liters are units of volume.
Goods that are liquids are usually labelled in Liters and milliliters.If the contents are solid or a mixture of liquid and solid are usually labelled in grams.Compressed gases are usually sold by weight.
Volume can be expressed in grams or liters. one of those
water
Bread is solid, and not measured in milliliters.
it could be C or D if your mercury is liquid it would be C if your mercury is solid it would be D
False
No, it cant
True
It is expressed in cubic units.