driving force
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]driving force (plural driving forces)
- Impetus; a person or thing that causes, stimulates, or motivates something to happen.
- 2003, Manja Ledderhos, Strategy on Multiple Channels, →ISBN:
- Many authors see a digital revolution taking place today and stress that this is a driving force behind many changes in companies.
- 2012, Hugh Downs, Yours Truly, Hugh Downs, →ISBN:
- Every living creature has a driving force that pushes him in the direction of certain goals.
- 2015, Mark Horsley, The Dark Side of Prosperity: Late Capitalism’s Culture of Indebtedness, →ISBN:
- With the aim of moving toward our subsequent discussion of the driving forces behind mass indebtedness, however, we might take things a little further by condensing the original work's detailed breakdown into two very broad causes of individual indebtedness.
- 2015, Mohammed bin Maktoum, Flashes of Thought, →ISBN:
- Sheikh Mohammed is the driving force behind the transformation of Dubai into one of the great cities of the modern world: a hub for business and tourism, and the world's gateway to the Middle East.
- 2023 March 8, Howard Johnston, “Was Marples the real railway wrecker?”, in RAIL, number 978, page 50:
- Marples, who later fled to Monaco to escape prosecution for fraud, was the driving force behind The Reshaping of British Railways report published on March 27 1963. Dr Richard Beeching [who wrote the report] was just his fall guy.
- The force that causes something to move or a physical process to occur.
- 2007, Helmut Mehrer, Diffusion in Solids, →ISBN, page 178:
- Diffusing particles experience a drift motion in addition to random diffusion, when an external driving force is applied.
- 2013, Nicholas Sperelakis, Physiology and Pathophysiology of the Heart, →ISBN, page 67:
- The total driving force is the sum of two forces: an electrical force (e.g. the negative potential in the cell tends to pull in positively charged ions) and a diffusion force (based on the concentration gradient) (fig. 3-5).
- 2016, Shripad T. Revankar, Pradip Majumdar, Fuel Cells: Principles, Design, and Analysis, →ISBN, page 277:
- The ions transport through the fuel cell electrolytes under the influence of both electrical potential gradient and concentration gradient as the driving forces.
Translations
[edit]driving force
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References
[edit]- “driving force”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.
- “driving force” in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Longman.
- “driving force” (US) / “driving force” (UK) in Macmillan English Dictionary.