immobile
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: Immobile
English
Etymology
From Old French immobile, from Latin immōbilis, equivalent to im- + mobile.
Pronunciation
Adjective
immobile (not comparable)
- Fixed, not movable.
- Synonyms: immovable, fixed, sessile; see also Thesaurus:immobile
- Antonyms: movable, mobile; see also Thesaurus:movable
Noun
immobile (plural immobiles)
- One who does not or cannot move (e.g. to travel or live elsewhere).
- 1963, Highway Research Record:
- […] if the constrained "immobiles" are given the same transportation access as the unconstrained "mobiles" […]
- 1988 February 25, Nigel Nicholson, Michael West, Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 132:
- Table 6.5 does indeed show that non-changers were more contented […] For Table 6.7 shows that even when we take account of the initial differences between the mobiles and immobiles, the mobiles' ratings of job characteristics move strongly in a positive direction while all the immobiles' record negative shifts. So the pattern is clear and consistent: jobs get better for movers and worse for non-movers.
- 2005 July 19, Ian M. Philpott, The Royal Air Force: The Trenchard Years, 1918–1929, Casemate Publishers, →ISBN:
- One ex-airwoman recalls meal times for both 'mobiles' and 'immobiles', when they sat on backless benches at long bare tables. The immobiles brought in their own food, crockery and cutlery. A free-standing iron range was used […]
Derived terms
Translations
not mobile
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References
- Meredith, L. P. (1872) “Immobile”, in Every-Day Errors of Speech, Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co., page 25.
French
German
Italian
Latin
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