n]
| 1. | the action or process of moving or of changing place or position; movement. |
| 2. | power of movement, as of a living body. |
| 3. | the manner of moving the body in walking; gait. |
| 4. | a bodily movement or change of posture; gesture. |
| 5. | a proposal formally made to a deliberative assembly: to make a motion to adjourn. |
| 6. | Law. an application made to a court or judge for an order, ruling, or the like. |
| 7. | a suggestion or proposal. |
| 8. | an inward prompting or impulse; inclination: He will go only of his own motion. |
| 9. | Music. melodic progression, as the change of a voice part from one pitch to another. |
| 10. | Machinery.
|
| 11. | to direct by a significant motion or gesture, as with the hand: to motion a person to a seat. |
| 12. | to make a meaningful motion, as with the hand; gesture; signal: to motion to someone to come. |
| 13. | go through the motions, to do something halfheartedly, routinely, or as a formality or façade. |
| 14. | in motion, in active operation; moving: The train was already in motion when he tried to board it. |

motion mo·tion (mō'shən)
n.
The act or process of changing position or place.
The manner in which the body or a body part moves.