Did you mean wavelength (inverse of frequency) instead of amplitude (size of signal)?
The impedance (sum of resistive and reactive) is going to vary with frequency for pretty much any conductor, even the specification sheets for wire will list the DC resistance, inductive, and capacitive properties.
Since electricity is more logical as the flow of the wave, where each individual electron may impart its energy onto its neighbors like dominos, the behavior of an individual electron isn't really too important until the temperature is cold enough that superconduction occurs (at which point they start to pair up and 'share' the resitance).
There are, of course, many exceptions like the skin effect that occurs at extremely high frequenices (the electron flow happens at the outside of the conductor, it acts more like a hollow wire) where something like Litz wire is used to maximize the skin area by having many separate individually insulated conductors nearby. Or like a biflar winding in alternate directions to minimize inductance and so on.
Regardless, with a frequency generator and a wheatstone bridge you can measure the impedance of a component and at least accurately predict its behavior just from that measurement.