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semifluid
/ ˌsɛmɪˈfluːɪd /
adjective
- having properties between those of a liquid and those of a solid
noun
- a substance that has such properties because of high viscosity
tar is a semifluid
Derived Forms
- ˌsemifluˈidity, noun
Other Words From
- semi·flu·idi·ty noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of semifluid1
Example Sentences
The idea that the fluid and semifluid as well as the solid constituents of the body contain the vital principle diffused through them he formed in 1755-1756, when, in making drawings illustrative of the changes that take place in the incubated egg, he noted specially that neither the white nor the yolk undergoes putrefaction.
These deposits, which are highly characteristic of gout, appear at first to take place in the form of a semifluid material, consisting for the most part of urate of soda, which gradually becomes more dense, and ultimately quite hard.
The sac broke two days later, smearing the bottom of the turtle's dish with semifluid yolk.
In the sedimentary rocks of North America there occur also extensive and valuable deposits of semifluid and solid hydrocarbons, such as maltha, asphaltum, albertite, grahamite, uintahite, etc., which have arisen, under the most plausible explanation thus far offered, from the concentration by evaporation of fluid hydrocarbons such as petroleum.
In brief, gaseous, fluid, semifluid, and solid hydrocarbons in great variety are widely distributed throughout the portions of North America where the surface is composed of sedimentary beds, and in a few instances occur in cavities in igneous rocks as well.
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