Take the mass of each liquid, divide by the volume, and that gives you density. If the density is nearly 1g/mL, it is water.
Yes, liquids can fill containers as long as the container can hold the volume of the liquid. The shape and size of the container will determine how the liquid fills it. Liquids will take the shape of the container they are poured into.
lettuce container, eggs container, All types of food has a container.
No it cannot be split into to containers as it is a solid?
yes
Liquids and gases share the property of changing shape in different containers. Liquids take the shape of their containers due to their ability to flow and conform to the shape of the container. Gases also fill the space of their container, taking its shape as they expand to fill the available volume.
The two states of matter that take the shape of their container are gases and liquids. Gases have no fixed shape or volume and will expand to fill any container, while liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container.
A dissolving container is typically referred to as a soluble or biodegradable container. These containers are designed to break down and dissolve when they come in contact with water or other liquids, making them environmentally friendly alternatives to traditional plastic containers.
This would be a liquid. You can experiment by moving the liquids back and forth between a couple different containers.
Shipping containers include dry containers for general cargo, reefers for temperature-sensitive goods, flat racks for oversized items, open tops for top-loading, tank containers for liquids and gases, open side containers for easy access, and half-height containers for dense cargo.
Some are, some aren't.
Solids retain their shape. It is liquids, gasses, and plasmas that take the shape of their containers.
Solids and liquids both have fixed volumes... in that if they are put into a container, they will not expand to fill the container. Gases on the other hand, do the exact opposite - they expand to fill their containers, thus not having fixed volumes.