Definition of

Mobile

Cellular

A mobile phone works without cables.

From the Latin mobĭlis , the notion of mobile allows the development of several linked concepts. In essence, a mobile is something that is mobile or that is not fixed or still. The concept can also be used in a symbolic sense to refer to that which moves or drives something .

A mobile can be a toy intended for children under five months old, made up of a stick from which different ornaments or figures hang. These figures, of different colors, move thanks to air currents or the impulse that someone gives them.

Mobile in art and physics

In the field of art , a hanging sculpture is known as a mobile, whose movement may be due to the air or the action of a motor. The term was suggested by Marcel Duchamp in 1932 .

In physics , a mobile is a body that is in motion. This allows the forces that act on it and its trajectory to be analyzed.

The cell phone

A mobile phone , also known as a cell phone , is one that does not have cables and that can be moved without problems in communication. The operation of this type of telephone is given by radio waves that allow it to access the antennas that make up the mobile telephone network.

In this area, it must be emphasized that currently the sector of these aforementioned mobile phones is growing a lot and experiencing a wide range of advances. Thus, we can establish that currently these communication devices have become something more. And through them we can also entertain ourselves with various games, find out about the news, update our social networks or even manage the home automation of our home.

All this is achieved thanks to a series of applications that are hosted in a series of "markets" where they can be acquired either for free or by paying amounts that will depend on the value of said applications.

In this way, today within the mobile telephone sector we can say that the concept of a smartphone has emerged, which is the one thanks to which we can carry out the aforementioned actions and many others, in addition to the usual and frequent ones such as calls and text messages.

Revolver

The motive for a crime is the reason or cause that motivated it.

Motive of a crime

In a symbolic sense, finally, the motive for a murder is the cause or reason that motivated the criminal to commit his act: "The motive for the murder of the businessman was revenge," "Investigators are still studying the possible motive for the crime." » .

Lovers of detective and mystery novels, in this case, will know that in them the discovery of the possible motive becomes a fundamental axis to find the culprit of the murders that occur. This happens, for example, in each and every one of the books by the famous Agatha Christie and in them, her protagonists (the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot or Miss Marpple ) dedicate their time to analyzing each of the possible suspects. and from there establish who had the motive to try to kill the victim.