👉 Fluid, often used interchangeably with liquid, refers to any substance that can flow and take the shape of its container. However, the term "differently fluid" typically highlights substances that exhibit unique or varied properties of liquids, such as supercritical fluids, colloids, or even gases under specific conditions. For example, supercritical fluids, like supercritical carbon dioxide, have properties that are intermediate between gases and liquids, making them useful in extraction processes. Colloids, like milk or fog, are mixtures where particles are dispersed throughout a continuous medium but do not settle out like in true solutions. Gases under high pressure can behave like liquids, a phenomenon known as liquid-like behavior, while under low pressure they act more like gases. These variations in behavior and properties make "differently fluid" a broad term encompassing a wide range of substances with unique characteristics.