mobile
1 Americanadjective
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capable of moving or being moved readily.
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Digital Technology. pertaining to or noting a cell phone, usually one with computing ability, or a portable, wireless computing device used while held in the hand, as in
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utilizing motor vehicles for ready movement.
a mobile library.
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Military. permanently equipped with vehicles for transport.
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flowing freely, as a liquid.
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changeable or changing easily in expression, mood, purpose, etc..
a mobile face.
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quickly responding to impulses, emotions, etc., as the mind.
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Sociology.
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characterized by or permitting the mixing of social groups.
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characterized by or permitting relatively free movement from one social class or level to another.
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of or relating to a mobile.
noun
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a piece of sculpture having delicately balanced units constructed of rods and sheets of metal or other material suspended in midair by wire or twine so that the individual parts can move independently, as when stirred by a breeze.
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Informal. a mobile home.
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Citizens Band Radio Slang. a vehicle.
noun
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a seaport in SW Alabama at the mouth of the Mobile River.
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a river in SW Alabama, formed by the confluence of the Alabama and Tombigbee rivers. 38 miles (61 km) long.
suffix
noun
adjective
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having freedom of movement; movable
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changing quickly in expression
a mobile face
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sociol (of individuals or social groups) moving within and between classes, occupations, and localities
upwardly mobile
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(of military forces) able to move freely and quickly to any given area
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informal (postpositive) having transport available
are you mobile tonight?
noun
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a sculpture suspended in midair with delicately balanced parts that are set in motion by air currents
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( as modifier ) Compare stabile
mobile sculpture
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short for mobile phone
Discover More
Alexander Calder, a twentieth-century American sculptor, is known for his mobiles.
Other Word Forms
- nonmobile adjective
- semimobile adjective
- unmobile adjective
Etymology
Origin of mobile
First recorded in 1450–1500; late Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin, neuter of mōbilis “movable,” contraction of assumed movibilis, equivalent to movi- (stem of movēre “to set in motion, impel, move”) + -bilis adjective suffix; see origin at move, -ble
Explanation
When something is mobile it can move or be moved easily. If you walk to the end of the block talking on your cell phone, you are a mobile being using a mobile device. A mobile is something you hang over a crib to entertain the baby, or a scale model of the universe. In 1940, the word mobile was first used to refer to a house that could be easily moved — a mobile home. If someone says to you jokingly that they "are not mobile," it means that their car is not working. It will be hard for them to be upwardly mobile, or to improve their social status, if they don't get mobile and get to work soon!
Vocabulary lists containing mobile
The London Eye Mystery
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Week 4 Spelling
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Traditionally, this system is linked to plasmid segregation and had only been found on plasmids, which are mobile genetic elements.
From Science Daily • Apr. 20, 2026
“The customer was just providing details when her husband came forward and grabbed the mobile phone started argument and cut the call,” a worker had scrawled in looped letters on a preprinted form.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 20, 2026
He’s a mobile notary and loan signing agent, a writer and performer.
From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 18, 2026
He praised the academy for recognising mobile games - which are often overlooked at major awards - "for the first time".
From BBC • Apr. 17, 2026
His limbs tingled and tickled, reawakening from the five-hour drive to his paternal grandmother’s mobile home on Dine Homelands, forty-five minutes north of Church Rock.
From "Healer of the Water Monster" by Brian Young
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.