movement

movement
/moohv"meuhnt/, n.
1. the act, process, or result of moving.
2. a particular manner or style of moving.
3. Usually, movements. actions or activities, as of a person or a body of persons.
4. Mil., Naval. a change of position or location of troops or ships.
5. abundance of events or incidents.
6. rapid progress of events.
7. the progress of events, as in a narrative or drama.
8. Fine Arts. the suggestion of motion in a work of art, either by represented gesture in figurative painting or sculpture or by the relationship of structural elements in a design or composition.
9. a progressive development of ideas toward a particular conclusion: the movement of his thought.
10. a series of actions or activities intended or tending toward a particular end: the movement toward universal suffrage.
11. the course, tendency, or trend of affairs in a particular field.
12. a diffusely organized or heterogeneous group of people or organizations tending toward or favoring a generalized common goal: the antislavery movement; the realistic movement in art.
13. the price change in the market of some commodity or security: an upward movement in the price of butter.
15. the working parts or a distinct portion of the working parts of a mechanism, as of a watch.
16. Music.
a. a principal division or section of a sonata, symphony, or the like.
b. motion; rhythm; time; tempo.
17. Pros. rhythmical structure or character.
[1350-1400; ME < MF; see MOVE, -MENT]
Syn. 1. See motion. 5. eventfulness.
Ant. 1. inertia, stasis.

* * *

(as used in expressions)
Anti Masonic Movement
Black Arts movement
homosexual rights movement
New Negro Movement
Tractarian movement
Pan African movement
women's movement
Harakat al Tahrir al WaTani al FilasTini Palestine National Liberation Movement
Harakat al Muqawimah al Islamiyyah Islamic Resistance Movement
International Movement of the Red Cross and Red Crescent

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

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