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  1. Dictionary
    motion
    /ˈməʊʃn/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. direct or command (someone) with a movement of the hand or head: "he motioned Dennis to a plush chair"
    • 2. propose for discussion and resolution at a meeting or legislative assembly: "a resolution, motioned by Adam Tyler, proposed that members without a CCL could still belong to the association"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Motion denotes change of position, either considered apart from, or as a characteristic of, something that moves; usually the former, in which case it is often a somewhat technical or scientific term: perpetual motion.

  3. 1. a. : an act, process, or instance of changing place : movement. a pendulum in motion. b. : an active or functioning state or condition. set the divorce proceedings in motion. 2. : an impulse or inclination of the mind or will. the fundamental motions of humanity to good or evil T. S. Eliot. 3. a. : a proposal for action.

  4. the act or process of moving, or a particular action or movement: The violent motion of the ship upset his stomach. He rocked the cradle with a gentle backwards and forwards motion. They showed the goal again in slow motion (= at a slower speed so that the action could be more clearly seen). [ C ] UK.

  5. the act or process of moving, or a particular action or movement: The violent motion of the ship upset his stomach. He rocked the cradle with a gentle backward and forward motion. They showed the goal again in slow motion (= at a slower speed so that the action could be more clearly seen). [ C ] UK.

  6. Motion is the activity or process of continually changing position or moving from one place to another.

  7. Jul 4, 2015 · [uncountable, singular] the act or process of moving or the way something moves. What was Newton's first law of motion? The swaying motion of the ship was making me feel seasick. Rub the cream in with a circular motion. in motion (formal) Do not alight while the train is still in motion (= moving).

  8. Motion is the way things get from place to place. The ball rolling down a hill is in motion, and as Isaac Newton once proved, it will remain in motion until it hits a wall or something else that makes it stop. When motion is used as a noun, it describes movement, like the motion that propels a car