to change your ideas, attitudes, behaviour etc
to leave a place when someone in authority tells you to
to leave one place and travel to another
to start to continue with your life after you have dealt successfully with a bad experience
to stop discussing or doing something and begin discussing or doing something different
to tell someone to move away from a place
It was a clever move on his part, to place her in his debt without making any kind of move on her.
It’s been a nightmare, but now I just want to forget about it and move on.
Let’s move on to the next question.
Police were aggressive in the way they moved the young people on.
Public opinion has moved on a great deal since then.
The thief-catcher wanted to move on at once to the house in Soho Square.
Therefore she wanted ignorance, which meant I'd have to get a move on to suss her game out.
They stayed for only a few days before moving on.
We moved on, as requested.
moves on
moving on
moved on
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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