Another way to move along the ground is to slither liKe a snake or jump like a frog or roll like a car.
Plates move along a fault through transform boundaries, where they slide past each other horizontally. Plates can also move through divergent boundaries, where they move away from each other. Lastly, plates can move along convergent boundaries, where they collide and push against each other, leading to subduction or mountain formation.
If you put a rock on a hill, the gravity of the ground will slowly make it move downhill.
They move away from each other in other words they are shifting.
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You can spell sent as cent (a penny), scent (a smell) or sent (to move along).
They move to meet their needs. They might move because of food, shelter, and other ways to live.
Bipedal, quadpedal, and the other one.
I can think of at least three ways the moon moves. It's primary movement is the orbit around planet earth, then it is also in orbit of the sun along with earth, and on top of that it is circling the black hole at the center of our milky way galaxy along with the solar system and many, many other planets and stars.
When plates slide past each other, move toward each other, and move away from each other.
They slide, move towards and move away from each.
Because the force is can move objects in any other way :p
Plates move through seafloor spreading, where new oceanic crust is created at mid-ocean ridges and pushes existing plates apart. Another way is through subduction, where one plate slides beneath another due to differences in density. Plates can also move horizontally past each other at transform boundaries.