no, a bottle of glue may be full and be 4 ounces, but if you fill the bottom of a bottle the same size with melted copper, it would weigh the same, but the copper is denser.
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It depends on the density of the material, since tonnes are a unit of weight, and m3 is a unit of volume. Since density expresses the weight per unit of volume, you can divide the weight by the density to find the volume. If we happens to be dealing with 7460 tonnes of water (density 1 tonne/m3) then there will be 7460 m3.
Gram is neither a measure of length, nor of weight. It is a unit of mass. Sometimes this is confused with weight, but it isn't the same thing.
The kilogram is the unit of MASS, not of weight. This is often confused. The SI unit of weight is the same as the unit for force, namely the newton.
mass (or weight, which is mass relative to Earth's gravity) and volume. The density unit will be mass (weight) per unit volume. For a very rough example, the density of air in a tire is measured in PSI (pounds per square inch)
Density isn't determined by the size of the specimen but by its mass per unit of volume. An oak branch has the same density as the whole tree it came from--the weights are vastly different, but density is the same.