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Vague question: do you need the height and weight of a quantity of water? Height of water varies according to it's container.

Literal answer: Height: Ruler or tape measure. Weight: Digital scale. (Triple beam balance measures mass, strictly speaking!) Quantity of water: Graduated cylinder, beaker, flask.

The "outside-the-box" answers

Height: Stopwatch, measuring the time it takes a dropped object to hit the ground.

Weight: Drop in floating object, measure the water displaced.

Quantity of water: Weigh the water, convert to grams. 1 ml = 1 g of water.

2006-10-16 09:23:57 · answer #1 · answered by Polymath 5 · 0 0

4"11, around ninety lbs. I say around because of the fact of fact my weight adjustments from 87 lbs. to ninety 3 lbs. So I purely say the midsection ninety lbs. that's the foremost common weight as at as quickly as as I weight myself. i do now no longer be attentive to my distinctive measurements and am to lazy to degree good now (and that i've got have been given no longer have been given a measuring tape!) yet I placed on a 32 length bra. I surely have consistently been small for my age, weighed shrink than distinctive youthful toddlers my age, yet have consistently been consistent with my develop fee. desire this helps you some. Sorry i've got have been given no longer have been given the various measurements for you.

2016-12-16 08:42:53 · answer #2 · answered by sameeruddin 3 · 0 0

a graduated cylinder mixed with a digatal scale

2006-10-16 09:12:13 · answer #3 · answered by Kaitlin B 2 · 0 0

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