No, just the opposite actually.Viscosity is the measure of the thickness of a liquid so a thicker liquid(ie, a liquid of high viscosity)would logically flow slower.
No. Viscosity is a liquid's resistance to flow. So higher viscosity means a slower flow.
The liquids with high viscosity flow slowly and liquids with low viscosity flow quickly.
The liquids with high viscosity flow slowly and liquids with low viscosity flow quickly.
Because liquids with a high viscosity flow slowly as to where a liquid with a low viscosity flow quickly
Because liquids with a high viscosity flow slowly as to where a liquid with a low viscosity flow quickly
Viscosity is a property of liquids, showing that liquid's resistance to flow. A liquid with a high viscosity would mean it flowed slowly. A liquid with a low viscosity would mean it flows rather quickly.
Viscosity is how much a liquid resists flow. Water has a low viscosity while molasses has a high viscosity.
allow substances to diffuse through it it moves faster than a liquid with a relatively high viscosity
Liquids with high viscosity flow slowly, like honey. Liquids with low viscosity flow quickly, like water and vinegar.
I think you may be talking about viscosity. The viscosity of a liquid is its resistance to flow, or its thickness. A less viscous liquid will flow more quickly than a more viscous fluid. As an example, water has very low viscosity and molasses has a high viscosity.
You get low viscosity with thin liquids like water that flow easily. Low viscosity means the liquid has low resistance. You get high resistance when you have liquids that flow slowly like honey and syrup, which means high viscosity.
Low viscosity liquid is more runny, like water, then compared to a high viscosity liquid.