Yes it is
Yes, an ounce of water will weigh the same when it is frozen. The mass of the water remains unchanged during the phase transition from liquid to solid; only its state and volume change. Therefore, whether it's in liquid or frozen form, an ounce of water retains its weight.
1 ounce of frozen liquid weighs approximately 0.99 ounces.
They are the same volume and very close to the same weight.
One ounce will always weigh the same. The ounce being liquid or solid does not make a difference.
One ounce will always weigh the same. The ounce being liquid or solid does not make a difference.
One ounce of weight measures the mass of an object, while one ounce of liquid measures the volume of a liquid. This means that one ounce of weight is a unit of mass, typically used to measure the heaviness of solid objects, while one ounce of liquid is a unit of volume, used to measure the amount of liquid in a container.
A liquid measure looks like wherever the liquid comes to, inside a measuring cup. Liquid measures are different from "dry" measures. An ounce of flour is not the same as an ounce of water. One is by weight, the other is by volume. FriPilot
Because it is a frozen liquid, and since it is frozen it isn't liquid.
A liquid ounce such as water is 2 tablespoons same with butter but dry weight varies such as flour or sugar etc
A weighed unit of liquid milk has exactly the same mass as an equal unit by weight of frozen milk. However frozen milk has a lower density than liquid milk.
Yes, frozen water (ice) and liquid water have the same mass when measured under the same conditions. The mass of water does not change when it freezes; however, its volume does change due to the difference in density between ice and liquid water. Ice is less dense than liquid water, which is why it floats.
No. Ounce can be used as volume of liquid or as mass of a solid