Example sentences of "to move out [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Former farm workers have felt the need to move out to the towns and cities in search not only of employment , but of higher pay , better working conditions , and increased opportunities for personal advancement ; and farmers have felt the need to shed labour as an accompaniment to increasing productivity .
2 ‘ Harry had a chip shop in Bradford and it was because of his wife 's health that he decided to move out to the Dales in 1928 , ’ said Richard Richardson , Harry Ramsden 's marketing director .
3 I 'm not looking to move out at the moment — I 'm quite happy where I am .
4 The short-term lets often suit people such as students when the off-season coincides with their term , but for families the disruption of having to move out for the summer is frustrating .
5 Their proclaimed wish to ‘ return to real work ’ is a contradiction , for it denies their own political scramblings to move out of the grinding realities of shift work .
6 Many Libyans especially in the smaller towns had been able to move out of the path of oncoming measures of social justice : many would not have been affected in any case ; some had no doubt been caught .
7 She may fear Aids for her son ; she may fear violence from her husband ; she may fear that her son will have to move out of the family home and fear her own loneliness .
8 It is reasonable , to start ideas in train in children , to compare an electron with a ping-pong ball , or the whole atom with a tiny solar system ; but the longer you stay with homely parallels , the harder it ultimately becomes for the child to move out of the imagery of pong-pong balls and into an appreciation that atoms are n't really like that at all .
9 Jem Marsh is deadly serious , not a flicker of a smile darting across his weathered expression : ‘ We 're going to move out of the component car industry .
10 Jess wondered uncomfortably whether she was expected to move out of the way and let the old ditherer through , or side with the Law and her own interests .
11 These poor scapegoats are regularly beset by mumiai who toss their belongings in the air , break pottery and trample on gardens , so as to force the peasant to move out of the village .
12 Offering a financial advisory service is so often a logical extension of tax advice and other staple accountancy functions that it seems almost perverse not to realise its potential and reap the rewards ( and this will be even more the case once we start to move out of the recession ) .
13 There may also be a reluctance to move out of the South , in the fear that if house prices in the ‘ North ’ increase at a slower rate , it may be difficult to return to the ‘ South ’ at a later date ( refer also to Chapter 8 , page 107 ) .
14 A GIRL aged 14 has already won a temporary court order allowing her to move out of the family home in Guildford , Surrey .
15 LUTON responded to tragedy with a battling performance to move out of the First Division 's bottom three .
16 By 20 July Wolfgang was writing to Leopold that he had been obliged to move out of the Weber 's house and find different lodgings , since ‘ people were gossiping ’ .
17 In addition , children have tended to move out of the parental home at a younger age ( Dale et al.
18 By the turn of the century their numbers seem to have declined ; they evidently tended to move out of the City , yielding place to wealthier residents .
19 To give an extreme example , fiscal policies designed to increase employment might take effect after a year , when , say , the economy had begun to move out of the recession .
20 The disputes between the counties and county boroughs continued as the population began to move out of the industrial cities into surrounding suburban estates or commuter villages in county areas .
21 The doors shut and the train began to move out of the station .
22 At the same time , many inner-city slums were knocked down , so part of the growing post-war population was forced to move out of the central urban areas .
23 But the quality of the housing then further declined and indigenous families tended to move out of the area .
24 So if you 'd like to move out of the seat , Sarah can come and find her own file .
25 A difference between McGregor and Tuckman seems to be that the former sees some groups as fixed in their poor behaviour , whereas the latter implies that groups tend to move out of the ineffective stages into more effective behaviour .
26 I feel that very strongly , I mean a lot of people have said , a lot of people in the flats have said , well I do n't want to move out of the area , I do n't like living in the flats , but I do n't want to move out of the .
27 I feel that very strongly , I mean a lot of people have said , a lot of people in the flats have said , well I do n't want to move out of the area , I do n't like living in the flats , but I do n't want to move out of the .
28 Erm will you be glad to move out of the flats ?
29 ‘ That 'll mean you wo n't have to move out of the coachhouse .
30 We are not in the business of giving handouts to the Duke of Westminster because he happens to move out of the present matrimonial home and into a single person 's flat .
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