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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
impulsion
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Enough emphasis can not be laid on the importance of rhythm, balance and impulsion.
▪ The degree of the animal's impulsion made the movement appear to be both fast and slow at the same time.
▪ The speed must be correct for each fence and impulsion created as necessary.
▪ These are rhythm, balance and impulsion.
▪ Up and down hill fences pose problems for the horse by placing a premium on balance and impulsion.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Impulsion

Impulsion \Im*pul"sion\, n. [L. impulsio: cf. F. impulsion. See Impel.]

  1. The act of impelling or driving onward, or the state of being impelled; the sudden or momentary agency of a body in motion on another body; also, the impelling force, or impulse. ``The impulsion of the air.''
    --Bacon.

  2. Influence acting unexpectedly or temporarily on the mind; sudden motive or influence; impulse. ``The impulsion of conscience.''
    --Clarendon. ``Divine impulsion prompting.''
    --Milton.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
impulsion

early 15c., "driving, pushing, thrusting," from Old French impulsion (early 14c.), from Latin impulsionem (nominative impulsio) "external pressure," figuratively "incitement, instigation," noun of action from past participle stem of impellere (see impel).

Wiktionary
impulsion

n. 1 The act of impelling or driving onward, or the state of being impelled; the sudden or momentary agency of a body in motion on another body; also, the impelling force, or impulse. 2 influence acting unexpectedly or temporarily on the mind; sudden motive or influence; impulse.

WordNet
impulsion
  1. n. a force that moves something along [syn: drift, impetus]

  2. the act of applying force suddenly; "the impulse knocked him over" [syn: impulse, impetus]

Wikipedia
Impulsion

Impulsion is the movement of a horse when it is going forward with controlled power. Related to the concept of collection, impulsion helps a horse effectively use the power in its hindquarters. To achieve impulsion, a horse is not using speed, but muscular control; the horse exhibits a relaxed spinal column, which allows its hindquarters to come well under its body and "engage" so that they can be used in the most effective manner to move the horse forward at any speed.

The concept and term was first written about by practitioners of dressage, but an ability to move with impulsion is a desired goal in most other equestrian disciplines. Impulsion occurs when a horse is under human control and is one of the desired goals in horse training, but it may sometimes be exhibited by a horse in a free and natural state. Impulsion allows any horse gait to be more elastic and light, and also provides the animal with the power needed to perform complex movements, including the piaffe and the airs above the ground. Within the dressage world, there is an unresolved debate whether impulsion can only occur in gaits which have a period of suspension, the trot and canter, or if it occurs at any gait, including the walk and the ambling gaits.

Usage examples of "impulsion".

Dunhuang was, before 848, under Tibetan occupation for some time but the impulsion to model in stucco is more likely to have entered Tibet from other areas of Buddhist artistic influence, such as the Tar im Basin of Xinjiang to the north, Kashmir in the west and Bihar in the south.

Like the Mussets and Sands, he failed to see that the Grand Passion was produced by the restraints that opposed themselves to the sexual impulse, just as the deep lake is produced by the dam that bars the passage of the stream, and the flight of the aeroplane by the air which resists the impulsion given to it by the motor.

You simply take her by the paws, as if she were a dancing partner, and yourself do the impulsion to make her wheel about in concert with you.

His psychology, however, being of an essentially rational kind, insufficiently attentive to the more deeply based, irrational impulsions of our nature, he assumed that when a custom or belief was shown to be unreasonable, it would presently disappear.

Klossowski loves to depict the play of conflicting impulsions as they traverse the flesh: Roberte invites the attention of some young stud by languidly proffering one upturned palm, even as her other hand irritatedly pushes him away.

The sewer, indeed, receives all the impulsions of the growth of Paris.

Later on, when each developed individuality and became personally conscious of impulsions and desires, the attraction of the light increased.

Buddhism has remained a monastic religion, nowhere more so than in Tibet, and monasteries have played a vital part in teaching and developing religious beliefs and their philosophical basis, even when the original impulsion came from outside their walls.