one of the opposites of volume is mass. because very often mass gets mixed up with volume.
Georgia chamberlain is cool
Volume = Area of rectangular face x Vertical distance between that face and the one opposite it.
The opposite (antonym) of opposite is same.
It must be. A cylinder is described by the volume swept by a rectangle in rotation about one of its axes. The rotation will create a circle on the opposite ends.
opposite of opposite to opposite from
The opposite of definite in volume (solids and liquids) would be indefinite in volume, as in gases, which can vary in volume for a given mass (pressure).
Georgia chamberlain is cool
the exact opposite
The opposite of drip would be not to drip. However, on the other end of the scale of intensity (volume) from drip is "gush."
The volume may be too loud and the phone may get confused with the sound and do the opposite thing.
Volume = Area of rectangular face x Vertical distance between that face and the one opposite it.
It's on the side of the 3ds, the opposite side to the wireless setting
Designate one of the faces as the base, and the distance between the plane the base is on, and the plane the opposite side is on, as the height. Then the volume is the base times the height.
No it doesn't. And it would be silly to, it's meant for home use, which is the total opposite of a volume license scenario.
Some products are high volume and low cost if they can be produced by machines cheaply and easily from heap products and sold at a large profit margin. The opposite would be low volume high cost items.
Density is not a descriptive word but a property of materials. Therefore, a material can have a high or low density. Density has units of unit mass per unit volume. "Specific volume" has units of unit volume per unit mass, so it is sort of an opposite. No real antonyms for "density" in the English langauge... some sense of "insubstantial" might work.
== == The opposite of a vacuum is a volume of matter. the opposite of a vacuum is a volume completely filled with matter... a space with no empty spaces within it... the given name for which being Plenum...