No, not all liquids have the same mass. The mass of a liquid depends on its density and volume. Different liquids have different densities, so their masses will vary even if they have the same volume.
The hypothesis would be: "All dishwashing liquids produce the same amount of bubbles." This hypothesis would need to be tested through a controlled experiment to determine its validity.
The negation of "some drinks are not liquids" is "all drinks are liquids." This statement asserts that every drink is a liquid.
The most common property of all liquids is that they have a definite volume but take the shape of their container. This characteristic allows liquids to flow and adapt to the shape of the container they are in.
They are all liquids at normal temperatures.
No. All liquids have different specific freezing points. Some liquids may have the same point, but that doesnt change anything.
Not at all.
no :(
no
No.
No
All liquids are made up of matter (atoms and molecules) which is what gives them their densities. Liquids are dense because they are made up of matter so all liquids have the same ingredient to make them dense.
No.
No, not all liquids have the same mass. The mass of a liquid depends on its density and volume. Different liquids have different densities, so their masses will vary even if they have the same volume.
shape but not the volume
The same way all liquids dry, evaporation.
No, it depends upon the nature of liquid.