| movement |
motion: a change of position that does not entail a change of location; "the reflex motion of his eyebrows revealed his surprise"; "movement is a sign of life"; "an impatient move of his hand"; "gastrointestinal motility" a natural event that involves a change in the position or location of something motion: the act of changing location from one place to another; "police controlled the motion of the crowd"; "the movement of people from the farms to the cities"; "his move put him directly in my path" a group of people with a common ideology who try together to achieve certain general goals; "he was a charter member of the movement"; "politicians have to respect a mass movement"; "he led the national liberation front" a major self-contained part of a symphony or sonata; "the second movement is slow and melodic" campaign: a series of actions advancing a principle or tending toward a particular end; "he supported populist campaigns"; "they worked in the cause of world peace"; "the team was ready for a drive toward the pennant"; "the movement to end slavery"; "contributed to the war effort" apparent motion: an optical illusion of motion produced by viewing a rapid succession of still pictures of a moving object; "the cinema relies on apparent motion"; "the succession of flashing lights gave an illusion of movement" bowel movement: a euphemism for defecation; "he had a bowel movement" drift: a general tendency to change (as of opinion); "not openly liberal but that is the trend of the book"; "a broad movement of the electorate to the right" the driving and regulating parts of a mechanism (as of a watch or clock); "it was an expensive watch with a diamond movement" the act of changing the location of something; "the movement of cargo onto the vessel"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| mover |
workman employed by a moving company; "the movers were very careful with the grand piano" proposer: (parliamentary procedure) someone who makes a formal motion someone who moves a company that moves the possessions of a family or business from one site to another
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| movement sense |
the awareness of motion by the head or body, based on input from muscle and joint receptors and hair cells. Called also kinesthesia.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
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| movement |
Assembly comprising all the main parts of a watch, also used in building many forms of apparatus such as mechanical or electrical counters, switching-devices, bells and, in general, all small portable appliances whose functions are dependent on the division of time. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movement_(clockwork)
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| movement disorder |
List of Movement disorders* Akinesia (lack of movement)* Athetosis (contorted torsion or twisting)* Ataxia* Ballismus (violent involuntary rapid and irregular movements)** Hemiballismus* Bradykinesia (slow movement)* Chorea (rapid, involuntary movement)** Sydenham's chorea** Rheumatic chorea** Huntington's chorea * Dystonia (sustained torsion)** Dystonia muscularum** Blepharospasm** Writer's cramp** Spasmodic torticollis (twisting of head and neck)* Parkinson's disease* Spasms (contractions ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movement_disorder
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