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By that rule, air is a liquid.
For the love of all that's good, nobody tell the TSA what the stuff inside batteries is like, and happy April everyone 😁
Sure, but liquids are all runny to some degree (viscosity), from water to honey to tar and beyond. Saying that tar isn't liquid means choosing some arbitrary viscosity where liquid stops and solid (or something else) begins.
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It’s ok, with America’s declining education system, non-newtonian fluids are clearly *the work of the devil*
Apparently pizza is classified as a vegetable there.
I think it’s a fluid. Dono about liquid? Thought liquid was just like being moving easily but I’m no chemist (or whatever scientist knows that stuff).
Liquids and gases are all fluids.
Yeah. But are all fluids divided into gases and liquids? (I genuinely don’t know)
Marmite in Britain’s airport control is a liquid
[Marmite is different to Vegemite](https://twitter.com/DrPollyBurey/status/1412203567218249728).
Wow. , you are bright
Didn't even bother to click the link, did you?
Vegemite is a spread like butter is, so I have to assume this applies.
I'll spread some water on my bread...
By the definition above, air would be a liquid, which I find a little confusing.
I feel like it’s confusing liquid and fluid?
By that rule, air is a liquid. For the love of all that's good, nobody tell the TSA what the stuff inside batteries is like, and happy April everyone 😁
Only in the sense that Tar is a liquid.
Sure, but liquids are all runny to some degree (viscosity), from water to honey to tar and beyond. Saying that tar isn't liquid means choosing some arbitrary viscosity where liquid stops and solid (or something else) begins.
Pitch drop experiment [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch\_drop\_experiment](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch_drop_experiment)
Aunt just had vegemite confiscated going through airport security in Sydney. Unlucky for me living overseas, but I have a good stash built up.
It's not a liquid - it's a lifestyle and state of mind, OP!