Fluid in a sentence as a noun

The visual style of the game made it more fluid, which made it more approachable.

It is blood mixed with interstitial fluid from the tip of the finger.

The speed of the fluid across the space should be a linear function of the relative distance from each wall.

Either way they hold sufficient assets to cover their deposits, just not all of those assets are fluid.

These simulations run inside an Eulerian grid, where each cell contains a fluid element.

But the economy and the job market are a lot more fluid -- sometimes for good, sometimes for bad -- than they were in the past.

Ok hackers, listen up...I know you love your fluid-width layouts, but just because you can fill the entire window with content, doesn't mean you have to.

Writing about how it completely blows one's mind and takes you to this baroque, fluid land of programming literacy.

It's still highly contagious, especially since it happens to cause people to tend to eject all kinds of different fluids.

Fluid in a sentence as an adjective

At some level it is a matter of how many molecules of the fluid you can move across the CPU-side heat exchanger per unit time.

The fluid solution, with some tricks, could easily achieve ten times better thermal uniformity than the air-cooled approach.

I can see building a systems that can very easily move 150W, or even double that, using a relatively simple fluidic cooler.

Tricking physics is a bit more interesting, a good example would be McLaren's F-Duct which used fancy fluid dynamics to turn a driver's leg into an on/off switch for drag on the rear wing.

But it's increasingly difficult to get working vulcanizing fluid for patching after the economy collapses; that **** doesn't have an indefinite shelf life.

Eventually, conflict between the small, closed, social-network-based "upper" elite and the larger, fluid, merit-based "upper-middle" elite reaches a boiling point.

A surgeon must take the patient to the operating room urgently, make a slash down the middle of the abdomen, wash out all the bilious and infected fluid, find the hole in the duodenum, and repair it.

What she has done with microfluidics is to reduce dead volume quite a bit to allow overall lower sample volumes, but this is an evolutionary, not revolutionary, change to instrumentation.

It used to be the case that life was considered as some sort of fluid stuff which was added to the Elements to turn the 'inorganic' material into 'organic' material -- the low-level chemical distinction between 'nonliving' and 'living'.

Fluid definitions

noun

a substance that is fluid at room temperature and pressure

noun

continuous amorphous matter that tends to flow and to conform to the outline of its container: a liquid or a gas

adjective

subject to change; variable; "a fluid situation fraught with uncertainty"; "everything was unstable following the coup"

See also: unstable

adjective

characteristic of a fluid; capable of flowing and easily changing shape

See also: runny

adjective

smooth and unconstrained in movement; "a long, smooth stride"; "the fluid motion of a cat"; "the liquid grace of a ballerina"

See also: fluent liquid smooth

adjective

in cash or easily convertible to cash; "liquid (or fluid) assets"

See also: liquid

adjective

affording change (especially in social status); "Britain is not a truly fluid society"; "upwardly mobile"

See also: mobile