Jump to content

unfluid

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From un- +‎ fluid.

Adjective

[edit]

unfluid (comparative more unfluid, superlative most unfluid)

  1. Not fluid; stiff or fixed.
    • 2002, Guy McCrone, Aunt Bel:
      And presently Mrs. Arthur Moorhouse was to be seen waltzing with just that right amount of unfluid dignity, that regal stiffness that comes with middle age, a touch of rheumatism, and an evergrowing sense of one's own consequence.
    • 2002, Bruce Thomas, Bruce Lee: Fighting Spirit:
      The way we are taught in school is to gather facts and concepts, so that, in the end, we grow up with a very fixed and unfluid sense of how things are.
    • 2019, Margaret Laurence, The Diviners:
      Naturally, the river wasn't wrinkled or creased at all— wrong words, implying something unfluid like skin, something unenduring, prey to age.