It is volume.
Its volume.
You are finding the volume of the solid figure.To find the volume of a solid figure, depending on the size of the object, you can use a graduated cylinder. You can fill the cylinder up to x amount of water and then measure the amount after dropping the solid into the water, and then subtract the amount before, from the amount after, to get the volume of a solid. You can also use simple mathematics to figure the volume of the solid. There are different formulas for calculating volume for different types of solid figures.
Volume of an object is a measure of the space occupied by objects.
The short answer is a solid.
A solid shape.
The measure of the amount of space a solid figure is Volume
volume
The measure of the amount of space a solid figure is Volume
Its volume.
There is no "space" inside a solid figure (body).However the solid figure can be measured in terms of its volume (the amount of space it occupies).
That's a description of the volume of a solid. The volume of an object is the amount of 3-dimentional space that object occupies.
It is its cubic capacity
Yes. A solid occupies space. All matter occupies space.
The answer is volume. Volume is a measure of the amount of 3-dimensional space that an object occupies.
The amount of space a 2-D figure occupies is known as area.
You are finding the volume of the solid figure.To find the volume of a solid figure, depending on the size of the object, you can use a graduated cylinder. You can fill the cylinder up to x amount of water and then measure the amount after dropping the solid into the water, and then subtract the amount before, from the amount after, to get the volume of a solid. You can also use simple mathematics to figure the volume of the solid. There are different formulas for calculating volume for different types of solid figures.
No, volume can be used to measure the amount of space an object occupies, whether it is a solid, liquid, gas, or any other material. Volume is the three-dimensional space that an object or substance occupies.