| movement |
In an artwork where there is no motion, movement refers to an implied motion created by the arrangement of the elements of art. Using lines, textures, and shapes, an artist can cause the eye to move over the work in different ways.
Ãâó: cuip.uchicago.edu/wit/99/teams/portraits/glossary....
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| movement of restitution |
Alteration in position that aligns the fetal head with the fetal spine.
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| movement pain |
Kinesalgia.
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| movement system |
The physiological components that function together to produce motion at a joint or multiple body segments. The components include the support and base; modulating nerves and muscles; cardiovascular and pulmonary reserves; and co
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| movement d. |
any of numerous neurologic disorders characterized by disturbances of muscular movement, distinguished as either hyperkinetic (conditions such as chorea, dystonia, hemiballismus, myoclonus, stereotypy, tic, and tremor) or hypokinetic (conditions such as akinetic mutism, psychomotor retardation, and the stiff-man syndrome).
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| move | move in an uncontrolled manner |
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| move | move upward |
| move | be promoted, move to a better position |
| move | capable of being moved or conveyed from one place to another |
| move | a religious holiday that falls on different dates in different years |
| move | emotionally moved |
| move | the act of changing your location from one place to another |
| move | the act of changing the location of something |
| move | a change of position that does not entail a change of location |
| move | a series of actions advancing a principle or tending toward a particular end |
| move | the driving and regulating parts of a mechanism (as of a watch or clock) |
| move | a general tendency to change (as of opinion) |
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