Example sentences of "to move [adv prt] from the " in BNC.

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1 As Hassan 's comment half-implies , it may in some areas be time for criticism to move on from the task of defining postmodernism in relation to its antecedents .
2 He is beginning to move on from the subjects which have dominated the last couple of years , feeling that he has gleaned all the experience he can from them .
3 At least for representing ideas , it is necessary to move on from the classical models to the semantic models because the required emphasis is on capability , expressiveness and abstraction .
4 At a conference in Munich , Germany , on Nov. 18-20 ministers from the 13 member countries of the European Space Agency ( ESA ) decided not to move on from the research to the development phase of the key Hermes spacecraft and the Columbus space laboratory projects .
5 Has a lot to prove this term , after a poor season Has to move on from the promising youngster stage .
6 A defence agent said Frost and his friends had intended to move on from the lay-by , opposite Invermoriston Post Office , as soon as they got their Giro cheques .
7 The company is also to change its name from Merrydown Wine to Merrydown plc and is applying to move up from the USM to the main market in January .
8 It does n't really matter if you succeed in catching the opponent 's foot or not : the main objective is to move out from the opponent 's centre-line while turning to face him .
9 Children also need help to move out from the parochialism of their world .
10 Novell Inc is putting another element in place in its quest to move out from the local network into the enterprise-wide network .
11 Obviously pupils need to move out from the objects to the people and society to which they belonged .
12 In towns , give way to buses indicating , an intention to move out from the bus stops , if you can do so safely .
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