Transform Boundaries
The word used to describe movement on faults is "fault slip." This term refers to the relative displacement of rock masses along a fault line during tectonic activity, such as an earthquake. Fault slip can occur in various forms, including strike-slip, dip-slip, and oblique-slip, depending on the direction of the movement.
A strike-slip fault is a type of fault where rocks on either side move past each other horizontally due to shearing forces. This movement can occur in either a left-lateral or right-lateral direction, depending on the relative motion of the blocks on either side of the fault.
Dip-slip faults is the term used for any fault that has movement in the vertical direction. One side moves up where as the other side moves down. Examples are Normal Fault and Reverse fault.
faults
Transform faults are the boundaries between two tectonic plates that slide past each other horizontally, neither creating nor destroying lithosphere. The motion along these faults is usually horizontal and can result in earthquakes.
True Slip and Net Slip are the same thing. We typically use the term "Net Slip" for the slip vector on a fault that describes the magnitude (length) and orientation (trend and plunge) of a line between two formerly adjacent points.
The African Luhya word for the English term 'slip' is "rereekhaa".
I'm not familiar with the term "freiden slip." It might be a misspelling or a specific term I'm not aware of. Can you provide more context or clarify the term for me to assist you better?
The term is 'earthquake'.
The term pink slip refers to the act of firing an employee or letting the employee go. When one gets a "pink slip" one can collect unemployment benefits until he can get another job.
Strike breakers
strikes