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Stere vs. Volume — What's the Difference?

Stere vs. Volume — What's the Difference?

Difference Between Stere and Volume

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Stere

The stere or stère (st) is a unit of volume in the original metric system equal to one cubic metre. The stère is typically used for measuring large quantities of firewood or other cut wood, while the cubic meter is used for uncut wood.

Volume

Volume is the quantity of three-dimensional space enclosed by a closed surface, for example, the space that a substance (solid, liquid, gas, or plasma) or 3D shape occupies or contains. Volume is often quantified numerically using the SI derived unit, the cubic metre.

Stere

A unit of volume equal to one cubic meter.

Volume

A collection of written or printed sheets bound together; a book.

Stere

A measure of volume used e.g. for cut wood, equal to one cubic metre.
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Volume

One of the books of a work printed and bound in more than one book.

Stere

A unit of cubic measure in the metric system, being a cubic meter, or kiloliter, and equal to 35.3 cubic feet, or nearly 11/3 cubic yards.

Volume

A series of issues of a periodical, usually covering one calendar year.

Stere

A rudder. See 5th Steer.

Volume

A unit of written material assembled together and cataloged in a library.

Stere

Helmsman. See 6th Steer.

Volume

A roll of parchment; a scroll.

Stere

To stir.

Volume

The amount of space occupied by a three-dimensional object or region of space, expressed in cubic units.

Volume

The capacity of such a region or of a specified container, expressed in cubic units.

Volume

Amount; quantity:a low volume of business; a considerable volume of lumber.

Volume

OftenvolumesA large amount:volumes of praise.

Volume

The amplitude or loudness of a sound.

Volume

A control, as on a radio, for adjusting amplitude or loudness.

Volume

A three-dimensional measure of space that comprises a length, a width and a height. It is measured in units of cubic centimeters in metric, cubic inches or cubic feet in English measurement.
The room is 9x12x8, so its volume is 864 cubic feet.
The proper products can improve your hair's volume.

Volume

Strength of sound; loudness.
Please turn down the volume on the stereo.
Volume can be measured in decibels.

Volume

The issues of a periodical over a period of one year.
I looked at this week's copy of the magazine. It was volume 23, issue 45.

Volume

A bound book.

Volume

A single book of a publication issued in multi-book format, such as an encyclopedia.
The letter "G" was found in volume 4.

Volume

A great amount (of meaning) about something.

Volume

(obsolete) A roll or scroll, which was the form of ancient books.

Volume

Quantity.
The volume of ticket sales decreased this week.

Volume

A rounded mass or convolution.

Volume

(economics) The total supply of money in circulation or, less frequently, total amount of credit extended, within a specified national market or worldwide.

Volume

(computing) An accessible storage area with a single file system, typically resident on a single partition of a hard disk.

Volume

(bodybuilding) The total of weight worked by a muscle in one training session, the weight of every single repetition summed up.

Volume

(intransitive) To be conveyed through the air, waft.

Volume

(transitive) To cause to move through the air, waft.

Volume

(intransitive) To swell.

Volume

A roll; a scroll; a written document rolled up for keeping or for use, after the manner of the ancients.
The papyrus, and afterward the parchment, was joined together [by the ancients] to form one sheet, and then rolled upon a staff into a volume (volumen).

Volume

Hence, a collection of printed sheets bound together, whether containing a single work, or a part of a work, or more than one work; a book; a tome; especially, that part of an extended work which is bound up together in one cover; as, a work in four volumes.
An odd volume of a set of books bears not the value of its proportion to the set.

Volume

Anything of a rounded or swelling form resembling a roll; a turn; a convolution; a coil.
So glides some trodden serpent on the grass,And long behind wounded volume trails.
Undulating billows rolling their silver volumes.

Volume

Dimensions; compass; space occupied, as measured by cubic units, that is, cubic inches, feet, yards, etc.; mass; bulk; as, the volume of an elephant's body; a volume of gas.

Volume

Amount, fullness, quantity, or caliber of voice or tone.

Volume

The amount of 3-dimensional space occupied by an object;
The gas expanded to twice its original volume

Volume

The property of something that is great in magnitude;
It is cheaper to buy it in bulk
He received a mass of correspondence
The volume of exports

Volume

Physical objects consisting of a number of pages bound together;
He used a large book as a doorstop

Volume

A publication that is one of a set of several similar publications;
The third volume was missing
He asked for the 1989 volume of the Annual Review

Volume

A relative amount;
Mix one volume of the solution with ten volumes of water

Volume

The magnitude of sound (usually in a specified direction);
The kids played their music at full volume

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