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move over

VERB
  1. move in order to make room for someone for something
    `Move over,' he told the crowd
    The park gave way to a supermarket

How To Use move over In A Sentence

  • Move over, microbiome, it's all about the vagus nerve. Times, Sunday Times
  • And you dumdum transplants who are complaining that you are getting passed on the right when you are in the middle lane-MOVE OVER. Move over Jersey drivers, Manahan takes on the left-lane lingerers
  • I may not remove overfar from you, I purpose to relate to you of a marquess, not an act of magnificence, but a monstrous folly, which, albeit good ensued to him thereof in the end, I counsel not any to imitate, for it was a thousand pities that weal betided him thereof. The Decameron of Giovanni Boccaccio
  • She watched his hand move over the gun and her body tensed up.
  • They fear that in the bleak weather, householders may want to take advantage of any offer to remove overgrown trees or shrubs.
  • Small, slim fingers eagerly and agilely move over their recorders' keys.
  • They said Mr Jenkins should make balanced programmes about the Black community or move over and let someone else who can.
  • We'll practice here tonight and tomorrow, then move over when things are good to go.
  • Move over hydrilla, there's a bigger, meaner invasive aquatic weed in town.
  • I move over to the dining room table behind her.
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