Ambulatory vs Mobility - What's the difference?
ambulatory | mobility |
Of, relating to, or adapted to walking
* Sir H. Wotton
(comparable, medicine) Able to walk about and not bedridden.
(medicine) Performed on or involving an ambulatory patient or an outpatient.
Accustomed to move from place to place; not stationary; movable.
* Jeremy Taylor
(legal) Not yet legally fixed or settled; alterable.
The round walkway encircling the altar in many cathedrals.
(uncountable) The condition of being mobile
(countable) A measure of the extent to which something is mobile
(countable) The movement of people or things
(uncountable) Ease of movement between economic conditions
As nouns the difference between ambulatory and mobility
is that ambulatory is the round walkway encircling the altar in many cathedrals while mobility is (uncountable) the condition of being mobile.As an adjective ambulatory
is of, relating to, or adapted to walking.ambulatory
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- ambulatory exercise
- The princess of whom his majesty had an ambulatory view in his travels.
- an ambulatory patient
- an ambulatory electrocardiogram
- ambulatory medical care
- an ambulatory court, which exercises its jurisdiction in different places
- The priesthood before was very ambulatory , and dispersed into all families.
- The dispositions of a will are ambulatory until the death of the testator.
