Movement may refer to:
Common usesEdit
- Movement (clockwork), the internal mechanism of a timepiece
- Motion, commonly referred to as movement
Arts, entertainment, and mediaEdit
LiteratureEdit
- "Movement" (short story), a short story by Nancy Fulda
- The Movement (comics), a comic book by Gail Simone and Freddie Williams II
- "Movement (운동, 運動)", a poem by Yi-sang
MusicEdit
Groups and labelsEdit
- Movement (band), an Australian soul/ambient band
- Movements (band), an American post-hardcore band
Albums and EPsEdit
- Movement (9mm Parabellum Bullet album)
- Movement (EP), an EP by The Fray
- Movement, an EP by BT
- Movement (Holly Herndon album)
- Movement (Joe Harriott album), or the title track
- Movement (Inhale Exhale album)
- Movement (New Order album)
- Movement (The Gossip album)
- Movements (album), by Booka Shade
SongsEdit
- "Movement" (LCD Soundsystem song), 2004
- "Movement" (Kompany song), 2019
- "Movement" (Hozier song), 2019
- "Movement", a 1998 song by The Black Eyed Peas from Behind the Front, 1998
- "Movement", by Jamie Woon from Making Time, 2015
- "Movement", by Club 8 from Pleasure, 2015
- "Movement", by Bobby Hutcherson from Components, 1965
Other uses in musicEdit
- Movement (music), a large division of a larger composition or musical notes
- Movement (music festival), the Detroit Electronic Music Festival
LanguagesEdit
- Movement (sign language), the direction and nature of the movement of the hands when signing
- Syntactic movement, a phenomenon in some theories of grammar within linguistics
Society and cultureEdit
- Art movement, a tendency or style in art with a specific common philosophy or goal, followed by a group of artists during a restricted period of time
- Environmental movement, an international movement, represented by a range of organizations, from enterprises to grassroots and varies from country to country
- Political movement, a coordinated group action focused on a political issue or ideology
- Social movement, a coordinated group action focused on a social issue
- Religious movement, a coordinated group action focused on a religious ideology
Other usesEdit
- Motor planning, the process by which a person anticipates and implements the movement of the body