释义 |
mo·bil·i·ty \mōˈbiləd.ē, -ətē, -i\ noun (-es) Etymology: Middle French mobilité, from Old French, from Latin mobilitat-, mobilitas, from mobilis mobile + -itat-, -itas -ity — more at mobile 1. : the quality or state of being mobile : the capacity or facility of movement : movability < the mobility of a liquid > < factors of birth, income, and education affecting social mobility > < the high mobility of modern labor > 2. : the measure of the rate at which a solid is deformed under stress after the yield point has been exceeded 3. a. : the average speed at which either gaseous or electrolytic ions move under the influence of a unit potential gradient b. : the average speed with which molecules in solution diffuse under the influence of a unit osmotic pressure gradient |