No. I cannot envisage any situation in which someone would want to measure the length of water!
A beaker is used to measure volume using water displacement.
beaker
The temperature of a beaker is typically measured using a thermometer that is placed in the water inside the beaker. The thermometer will provide a reading of the water temperature, which indirectly reflects the temperature of the beaker as well.
To measure a stone using a beaker, first fill the beaker with water to a known volume. Then, carefully add the stone to the water and measure the new volume of water, also known as the displacement volume. The difference in volume between the two measurements will give you the volume of the stone.
yes
The answer will depend on the capacity of the beaker. There is no information about that in the question.
Measure out any volume of water in a pre-weighed beaker (or container...sigh*). Then bake the beaker in a warm oven until all the water evaporates and the beaker is dry. Reweigh the beaker . Subtract the original weight of the empty beaker from the new weight. You now have the weight of the salt present in your original amount of water ! NOTE: If you are using ocean water this may be imprecise due to other contaminants remaining in the beaker. AKA you are not JUST weighing salt at the end. SOURCE: I'm an Organic Chemistry teacher...it's what I do!
It is necessary to know the mass of the empty beaker.
It is transititve. For example, I measured the water in the beaker.
Graduated Cylinder (A+)
Submerge it in water and measure how much the water rises.
The volume of water in Beaker X after pouring all the water from Beaker Y will be 100cm3. The marbles in Beaker X do not displace or absorb the water, so the total volume of Beaker X will still be 100cm3.