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Synonyms

self-moving

American  
[self-moo-ving, self-] / ˌsɛlfˈmu vɪŋ, ˈsɛlf- /

adjective

  1. capable of moving without an external agency.


Other Word Forms

  • self-movement noun
  • self-mover noun

Etymology

Origin of self-moving

First recorded in 1575–85

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.

Before now, Kriegman said, “no one has been using living materials as self-moving, self-powered robots.”

From Seattle Times • Dec. 2, 2021

Eternally patient and silent, these looming claymen have a greater dignity than sinister, prattling living dolls or self-moving puppets.

From The Guardian • Aug. 27, 2010

His theme was "The Transformation of an Organic Design," and the design he referred to was a longtime favorite of Nature's, the "self-moving grappling bridge."

From Time Magazine Archive

Descartes’ remarkable and novel claim, first stated in the Discourse on Method, was that animals are automata, that is, complex, self-moving machines.

From "The Invention of Science" by David Wootton

Take the atoms one by one that constitute this mass of pollution and misery, and you will find that each one of them is a self-moving and an unforced will.

From Sermons to the Natural Man by Shedd, William G. T. (William Greenough Thayer)