S: (n) ascension ((astronomy) the rising of a star above the horizon)
S: (n) circulation (free movement or passage (as of cytoplasm within a cell or sap through a plant)) "ocean circulation is an important part of global climate"; "a fan aids air circulation"
S: (n) creep (a slow longitudinal movement or deformation)
S: (n) gravitation (movement downward resulting from gravitational attraction) "irrigation by gravitation rather than by pumps"
S: (n) flow, stream (the act of flowing or streaming; continuous progression)
S: (n) flow (any uninterrupted stream or discharge)
S: (n) stream, flow (something that resembles a flowing stream in moving continuously) "a stream of people emptied from the terminal"; "the museum had planned carefully for the flow of visitors"
S: (n) stream, flow, current (dominant course (suggestive of running water) of successive events or ideas) "two streams of development run through American history"; "stream of consciousness"; "the flow of thought"; "the current of history"
S: (n) menstruation, menses, menstruum, catamenia, period, flow (the monthly discharge of blood from the uterus of nonpregnant women from puberty to menopause) "the women were sickly and subject to excessive menstruation"; "a woman does not take the gout unless her menses be stopped"--Hippocrates; "the semen begins to appear in males and to be emitted at the same time of life that the catamenia begin to flow in females"--Aristotle
Verb
S: (v) flow, flux (move or progress freely as if in a stream) "The crowd flowed out of the stadium"
S: (v) run, flow, feed, course (move along, of liquids) "Water flowed into the cave"; "the Missouri feeds into the Mississippi"
S: (v) flow (cause to flow) "The artist flowed the washes on the paper"
S: (v) flow (be abundantly present) "The champagne flowed at the wedding"