Action comes from the Latin "actionem", ac. from “actio”, from the participle “actum” of the verb “agere” - “to make, to put in motion.
The action is the exercise of the possibility of doing or the outcome of this do. According to the Royal Spanish Academy, action is the result of doing; the effect that an agent causes on something, for example, the action of erosion on rocks this term has different uses and applications:
It is the effect that an agent causes on something, a combat or fight, a set of movements and gestures or a succession of events, for example in the area of physics, the action is a quantity defined as the product of the energy absorbed during a process for its duration. In the field of art, action is the posture or attitude of a natural model who poses to be portrayed.
The notion of action is widely used in law. It is the right to go to a judge or a court in search of the protection of a right or interest. On the other hand, it is a power derived from a subjective right to enforce its content in the framework of a trial.
A share is also an accounting title that credits and represents the value of each one of the aliquots into which the capital of a company is divided. Action cinema is a cinematographic genre characterized by violence and the spectacular nature of the images. Throughout these films, scenes with shootings, fights, chases and deaths often follow.