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All motility antonyms

mo·tile
M m

noun motility

  • apathy — You can use apathy to talk about someone's state of mind if you are criticizing them because they do not seem to be interested in or enthusiastic about anything.
  • insensibility — incapable of feeling or perceiving; deprived of sensation; unconscious, as a person after a violent blow.
  • numbness — deprived of physical sensation or the ability to move: fingers numb with cold.
  • unconsciousness — not conscious; without awareness, sensation, or cognition.
  • insensitivity — deficient in human sensibility, acuteness of feeling, or consideration; unfeeling; callous: an insensitive person.
  • concrete — Concrete is a substance used for building which is made by mixing together cement, sand, small stones, and water.
  • solid — having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
  • thing — (in Scandinavian countries) a public meeting or assembly, especially a legislative assembly or a court of law.
  • idleness — the quality, state, or condition of being lazy, inactive, or idle: His lack of interest in the larger world and his consummate idleness were the causes of their dreadful divorce.
  • stagnation — the state or condition of stagnating, or having stopped, as by ceasing to run or flow: Meteorologists forecast ozone and air stagnation.
  • repose — the state of reposing or being at rest; rest; sleep.
  • stiffness — rigid or firm; difficult or impossible to bend or flex: a stiff collar.
  • stillness — silence; quiet; hush.
  • immobility — the quality or condition of being immobile or irremovable.
  • rest — a support for a lance; lance rest.
  • decrease — When something decreases or when you decrease it, it becomes less in quantity, size, or intensity.
  • stoppage — an act or instance of stopping; cessation of activity: the stoppage of all work at the factory.
  • inaction — absence of action; idleness.
  • inactivity — not active: an inactive volcano.
  • cessation — The cessation of something is the stopping of it.
  • inertia — inertness, especially with regard to effort, motion, action, and the like; inactivity; sluggishness.
  • halt — to falter, as in speech, reasoning, etc.; be hesitant; stumble.
  • pause — a temporary stop or rest, especially in speech or action: a short pause after each stroke of the oar.
  • indifference — lack of interest or concern: We were shocked by their indifference toward poverty.
  • decline — If something declines, it becomes less in quantity, importance, or strength.
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