I'm gonna go all Sageous on ya for a minute here (or as best I can, he could do it better). In actuality nothing is moving and nothing actually exists in the dream - it's all just your mind creating and maintaining a clever illusion. There are no other people - you don't have a body, it's all just dream. Sometimes for me this becomes apparent when the whole dream will suddenly drop into what I call low-res, everything turns all simple and almost blocky, like a video game that needs to buffer or something. Or like if you're watching a video in HD on YouTube and suddenly that needs to buffer so it drops into extreme low-res like 240p or something.
As a more direct response to your question, keeping what I just said in mind, the subconscious is very inventive in creating these illusions for us and switches between different ones from time to time. Sometimes maybe it will seem the scene is flowing past as you're holding still, sometimes it will seem as if your'e actually just watching it all on a big screen or something. Sometimes it will feel like you're struggling mightily and barely able to float 6 feet over the ground at a slow walking pace, and maybe even then you start to lose motive power and descend like a dirigible deflating. 
And sometimes I get this super-flying capability where I'm miles above everything and moving like a supersonic jet. That's pretty rare for me though and I think it's taxing on the mind's 'processing power' to maintain it. I also notice sometimes when I'm flying or falling there's a definite sensation of forward acceleration in my body that I believe I'm actually experiencing physically, because if I wake up it's still there for a while, and in fact I can sometimes feel it even before falling asleep, as I quiet down in bed, and I know there are going to be lots of flying or falling dreams. I think the sensation comes before the dream, rather than being caused by it. I'm not sure what causes it. My suspicion is it might be caused by sugar, or maybe just some kind of excitation in the body, the body chemistry – maybe some adrenaline or something.
I know a lot of dream scenarios reflect actual physical conditions, but flying often is just a dream thing. I can generally tell the difference when it's a body thing (if the bodily sensation is really strong I know I'm in for a bad night of falling over and over from tilting skyscrapers that suddenly shoot up to thousands of feet high).
Oh yeah, I wanted to actually say something helpful too before I get carried away! One thing I've found is that if you want to fly don't think about the flying itself but imagine your goal and feel a strong urge to get there. You might fly or you might teleport or something else, but if you do fly it's going to be much stronger and faster than if your'e thinking about the effort involved. Thinking about the goal sort of pulls you forward rather than you having to push the whole way. That said though, sometimes I can fly really well and love to do it with no particular goal in mind.
One way I used to do it is to find myself on a rooftop (not one of the thousand-foot-high ones, this is when it's not a bodily sensation dream) and I just kind of know I can't be hurt without becoming fully lucid - I recognize it as "one of these things I get into sometimes where I can do cool stuff like flying" but don't fully realize it's called a dream. In those I just know I can do things I can't normally do, so I'll leap fearlessly off the roof and either start flying right away or sometimes I might fall to just above the ground (and I mean like a half an inch above) and then my downward motion will effortlessly switch to horizontal motion and I find myself gliding as if on smooth ice just above the ground. Those are fun!
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