Description of reflection moveout from dipping interfaces is important in developing seismic processing methods for anisotropic media, as well as in the inversion of reflection data. Here, I present a concise analytic expression for normal-moveout (NMO) velocities valid for a wide range of homogeneous anisotropic models including transverse isotropy with a tilted in-plane symmetry axis and symmetry planes in orthorhombic media. In transversely isotropic media, NMO velocity for quasi-IF-waves may deviate substantially from the isotropic cosine-of-dip dependence used in conventional constant-velocity dip-moveout (DMO) algorithms. However, numerical studies of NMO velocities have revealed no apparent correlation between the conventional measures of anisotropy and errors in the cosine-of-dip DMO correction (''DMO errors''). The analytic treatment developed here shows that for transverse isotropy with a vertical symmetry axis, the magnitude of DMO errors is dependent primarily on the difference between Thomsen parameters epsilon and delta. For the most common case, epsilon - delta > 0, the cosine-of-dip-corrected moveout velocity remains significantly larger than the moveout velocity for horizontal reflector. DMO errors at a dip of 45 degrees may exceed 20-25 percent, even for weak anisotropy. By comparing analytically derived NMO velocities with moveout velocities calculated on finite spreads, I analyze anisotropy-induced deviations from hyperbolic moveout for dipping reflectors. For transversely isotropic media with a vertical velocity gradient and typical (positive) values of the difference epsilon - delta, inhomogeneity tends to reduce (sometimes significantly) the influence of anisotropy on the dip dependence of moveout velocity.