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movable
[moo-vuh-buhl]
adjective
capable of being moved; not fixed in one place, position, or posture.
Law.(of property)
not permanent in reference to place; capable of being moved without injury.
personal, as distinguished from real.
changing from one date to another in different years.
a movable holiday.
(of type or matrices) able to be rearranged.
noun
an article of furniture that is not fixed in place.
Law.Often movables. an article of personal property not attached to land.
movable
/ ˈːəə /
adjective
able to be moved or rearranged; not fixed
(esp of religious festivals such as Easter) varying in date from year to year
(usually speltmoveable) law denoting or relating to personal property as opposed to realty
printing (of type) cast singly so that each character is on a separate piece of type suitable for composition by hand, as founder's type
noun
(often plural) a movable article, esp a piece of furniture
Other 51Թ Forms
- movability noun
- movableness noun
- movably adverb
- nonmovability noun
- nonmovable adjective
- nonmovableness noun
- nonmovably adverb
- unmovable adjective
- ˈDZ adverb
- ˌDZˈٲ noun
51Թ History and Origins
Example Sentences
“So all these tables and chairs are movable, and there are cord rails hanging up from the ceiling, so they can get access to power in any configuration they might need,” she said.
Bands are like families, and even more so since we had the sibling dynamic of Vicki and Debbi already, and there was a slight sense of movable factions.
He, his bus, its 20 passengers and one conductor were on the edge of the southern bascule - a movable section of road - which was continuing to rise.
This mandated the designing and construction of 60 sets, including many with movable walls and ceilings to facilitate camera movement.
Disney views the cruise line as a “movable asset” that serves as an ambassador of the company’s brand, Mazloum said.
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