dynamic | | |
n. (motive) | 1. dynamic, moral force | an efficient incentive.; "they hoped it would act as a spiritual dynamic on all churches" |
| ~ incentive, inducement, motivator | a positive motivational influence. |
adj. | 2. dynamic, dynamical | characterized by action or forcefulness or force of personality.; "a dynamic market"; "a dynamic speaker"; "the dynamic president of the firm" |
| ~ can-do | marked by a willingness to tackle a job and get it done.; "a can-do kind of person"; "the city's indomitable optimism and can-do spirit" |
| ~ changing, ever-changing | marked by continuous change or effective action. |
| ~ driving, impulsive | having the power of driving or impelling.; "a driving personal ambition"; "the driving force was his innate enthusiasm"; "an impulsive force" |
| ~ energising, energizing, kinetic | supplying motive force.; "the complex civilization of which Rome was the kinetic center" |
| ~ high-power, high-powered, high-octane, high-voltage, high-energy | vigorously energetic or forceful.; "a high-octane sales manager"; "a high-octane marketing plan"; "high-powered executives"; "a high-voltage theatrical entrepreneur" |
| ~ projectile | impelling or impelled forward.; "a projectile force"; "a projectile missile" |
| ~ propellant, propellent, propelling, propulsive | tending to or capable of propelling.; "propellant fuel for submarines"; "the faster a jet plane goes the greater its propulsive efficiency"; "universities...the seats of propulsive thought" |
| ~ self-propelled, self-propelling | moved forward by its own force or momentum.; "a self-propelled egotist"; "the arms program is now self-propelled" |
| ~ slashing | as if striking with slashing blows.; "his slashing demon-ridden cadenza" |
| ~ energetic | possessing or exerting or displaying energy.; "an energetic fund raiser for the college"; "an energetic group of hikers"; "it caused an energetic chemical reaction" |
adj. (pertain) | 3. dynamic | of or relating to dynamics. |
| ~ natural philosophy, physics | the science of matter and energy and their interactions.; "his favorite subject was physics" |
adj. | 4. active, dynamic | (used of verbs (e.g. `to run') and participial adjectives (e.g. `running' in `running water')) expressing action rather than a state of being. |
| ~ grammar | the branch of linguistics that deals with syntax and morphology (and sometimes also deals with semantics). |
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