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movement
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English mevement, from Old French movement (modern French mouvement), from movoir + -ment; cf. also Medieval Latin movimentum, from Latin movere (“move”). Doublet of moment and momentum. In this sense, displaced native Old English styring, which led to Modern English stirring.
Pronunciation
Noun
movement (countable and uncountable, plural movements)
- Physical motion between points in space.
- (engineering) A system or mechanism for transmitting motion of a definite character, or for transforming motion, such as the wheelwork of a watch.
- The impression of motion in an artwork, painting, novel etc.
- A trend in various fields or social categories, a group of people with a common ideology who try together to achieve certain general goals.
- social movement
- The labor movement has been struggling in America since the passage of the Taft-Hartley act in 1947.
- 2021, Richard C. Bush, Difficult Choices: Taiwan's Quest for Security and the Good Life, Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 274:
- During the latter part of Taiwan's authoritarian period, social protest movements arose that complemented the periodic efforts of the political opposition- the dangwai-to open the political system. One of the most prominent movements occurred in the town of Lukang in Changhua County in 1986.
- (music) A large division of a larger composition.
- Beethoven's movements
- (music) Melodic progression, accentual character, tempo or pace.
- (aviation) An instance of an aircraft taking off or landing.
- Albuquerque International Sunport serviced over 200,000 movements last year.
- (baseball) The deviation of a pitch from ballistic flight.
- The movement on his cutter was devastating.
- (bridge) A pattern in which pairs change opponents and boards move from table to table in duplicate bridge.
- Ellipsis of bowel movement (“an act of emptying the bowels”).
- 1923, Samuel Goodwin Gant, Diseases of the Rectum, Anus, and Colon, Including the Ileocolic Angle, page 47:
- when after a movement feces are streaked with blood and the patient suffers from sphincter algia, a fissure should be suspected,
- (obsolete) Motion of the mind or feelings; emotion.
Derived terms
- aftermovement
- aircraft movement
- A-movement
- antimovement
- art movement
- beta movement
- bowel movement
- Brownian movement
- camera movement
- choreiform movement
- civil rights movement
- comovement
- countermovement
- criminal religious movement
- cultural movement
- ecomovement
- ecumenical movement
- eye movement desensitization and reprocessing
- freedom of movement
- free school movement
- head movement
- holiness movement
- holomovement
- Howell movement
- human movement
- human potential movement
- involuntary movement
- Jesus movement
- literary movement
- march-movement
- micromovement
- midmovement
- Mitchell movement
- movement control order
- movement disorder
- multimovement
- new religious movement
- nonmovement
- of its proper movement
- Oxford movement
- perimovement
- photomovement
- pincer movement
- postmovement
- premovement
- Protestant Movement
- rapid eye movement
- social movement
- streaming movement
- submovement
- temperance movement
- voluntary movement
- wh-movement
- youth movement
Translations
physical motion
|
horology: device that cuts time in equal portions
trend in various fields or social categories
|
music: division of a larger musical composition
|
aviation: aircraft taking off or landing
baseball: deviation of a pitch
an act of emptying the bowels
|
See also
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Franc-Comtois
Etymology
Derived from Old French movoir
Noun
movement m (plural movements)
References
Middle French
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Old French movement.
Noun
movement m (plural movemens)
Descendants
- French: mouvement
Occitan
Etymology
From Old Occitan; equivalent to mover + -ment. Cf. also Medieval Latin movimentum.
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Noun
movement m (plural movements)
Related terms
Further reading
- Joan de Cantalausa (2006), Diccionari general occitan a partir dels parlars lengadocians, 2 edition, →ISBN, page 664.
Old French
Etymology
movoir + -ment; cf. also Medieval Latin mōvimentum (itself probably partly based on the Old French or other early Romance cognates), from Latin moveō.
Noun
movement oblique singular, m (oblique plural movemenz or movementz, nominative singular movemenz or movementz, nominative plural movement)
Descendants
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