Liquidity vs Fluidity - What's the difference?
liquidity | fluidity |
(uncountable) The state or property of being liquid.
(economics, countable) An asset's property of being able to be sold without affecting its value; the degree to which it can be easily converted into cash.
(finance) Availability of cash over short term: ability to service short-term debt.
(uncountable) The state of being fluid rather than viscous
(countable) A measure of the extent to which something is fluid. The reciprocal of its viscosity.
The quality of being fluid or free-flowing
*{{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=June 19
, author=Phil McNulty
, title=England 1-0 Ukraine
, work=BBC Sport
In uncountable|lang=en terms the difference between liquidity and fluidity
is that liquidity is (uncountable) the state or property of being liquid while fluidity is (uncountable) the state of being fluid rather than viscous.As nouns the difference between liquidity and fluidity
is that liquidity is (uncountable) the state or property of being liquid while fluidity is (uncountable) the state of being fluid rather than viscous.liquidity
English
(wikipedia liquidity)Noun
- Some stocks are traded so rarely that they lack liquidity .
Antonyms
* illiquidityfluidity
English
Noun
citation, page= , passage=Either side of Rooney's fluffed chance, it was a tale of Ukrainian domination as they attacked England down both flanks and showed the greater fluidity of the teams.}}
