moved on

listen to the pronunciation of moved on
English - English
continued on, moved forward
move on
To start dealing with something else

You need to forget about the past and move on.

move on
To leave somewhere for another place

After spending the night resting in an abandoned church, the group decided to move on in their quest.

move on
giddy-up
move on
If someone such as a policeman moves you on, they order you to stop standing in a particular place and to go somewhere else. Eventually the police were called to move them on
move on
continue on, move forward
move on
move forward, also in the metaphorical sense; "Time marches on"
move on
When you move on somewhere, you leave the place where you have been staying or waiting and go there. Mr Brooke moved on from Paris to Belgrade What's wrong with his wanting to sell his land and move on?
move on
If you move on, you finish or stop one activity and start doing something different. She ran this shop for ten years before deciding to move on to fresh challenges Now, can we move on and discuss the vital business of the day
moved on

    Turkish pronunciation

    muvd ôn

    Pronunciation

    /ˈmo͞ovd ˈôn/ /ˈmuːvd ˈɔːn/

    Etymology

    [ 'müv ] (verb.) 13th century. Middle English, from Middle French movoir, from Latin movEre; probably akin to Sanskrit mIvati he moves, pushes.

    Videos

    ... And so we moved on to the automatic search engines. ...
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