Exactly 9,000 cc of water, or 9 liters.
Once easy way is displacement. You can place it in liquid and see how much liquid it displaces. This will be the volume.
A cube with sides 10cm long would have a volume of 1,000 cm3 = 1 Liter.The amount of liquid in it would depend on how much of that volume is hollow,and on how much liquid you had poured into the hollow volume. The cubecould be solid, hollow and empty, hollow and full etc., or anything in between
If the volume of the substance in the gaseous state is 1000 times the volume of the substance in the liquid state, this means that 1 ml of the substance in the liquid state would occupy 0.001 ml when it evaporates into a gas.
To dilute a liquid to 50 percent, you would need to add an equal volume of water to the original liquid volume. For example, to dilute 1 liter of liquid to 50%, you would add 1 liter of water to make a total of 2 liters at 50% concentration.
The answer depends on the quantity of liquid. A graduated cylinder will not be much use in measuring the volume of liquid in an ocean!
40g of liquid chocolate. To find the volume you need to know the specific density of the chocolate.
The volume of 200 g of liquid would depend on the density of the liquid. For water, which has a density of approximately 1 g/mL, 200 g of water would be equivalent to 200 mL.
$ 9000
Volume is represented by how much space a solid, liquid, or gas takes up. Liquids can take the shape of any container they are put in. However, unlike a gas, they have a given volume.
You can't convert pounds into a volume because it would depend on how dense what you are measuring is.
You can not directly equate mass (mg) and volume (ml) without knowing the density of the substance being measured. For instance 9mg of liquid mercury would occupy a much smaller volume than 9 mg of water.
Volume is how much cubic units could hold, and capacity is how much an object can hold a liquid.