Nope, lots of fluids that just flow over such a long period they appear solid.
That ‘long period’ can be many billions of years, glass is an amorphous solid.
That’s a misconception. Glass does not flow over time; it is a rigid, amorphous solid. The uneven thickness seen in old cathedral windows is a result of historical manufacturing. Glass was spun into discs that naturally became thicker at the edges, and builders installed the heavier side at the bottom for stability. Physicists calculate that it would take longer than the age of the universe for room-temperature window glass to visibly deform under gravity. Reference: Zanotto, E. D. (1998). "Do cathedral glasses flow?" American Journal of Physics, https://doi.org/10.1119/1.19026
Not sure why klustregrif got flagged - the answer was informative and correct.
What I said is true but not for glass. Pitch is a liquid even though it feels like a solid and shatters when smashed.