laminar
LAM-ih-nar
Flow in which a fluid moves in smooth, parallel layers with no turbulence — each layer sliding past the next without mixing. In a river, laminar flow is rare and beautiful: the water moves as a sheet, glassy and undisturbed. The opposite is turbulent flow, where the water mixes chaotically. Most natural water flow is turbulent; laminar flow exists only in the slowest, smoothest conditions.
Etymology
Latin lamina, a thin plate, a layer. Flow in layers.
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