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to move everything
verb
To change place or posture; to stir; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another.
Exact(39)
"Before we had to move everything, literally, off the bus every day.
America relies on its waterways to move everything from oil and coal to chemicals and salt.
"We're facing a situation that is realistically difficult to move everything out of the prefecture.
They told him plans were made to move everything to the West should anything happen.
"It was like a Rubik's Cube: when you moved one thing, you had to move everything else".
"I wish I could tell you there's one area in the country that's really, really cold and it would make sense to move everything there," he said.
Similar(17)
Mary Kyle, a businesswoman In her fifties said she had taken every precaution she could from stocking up on batteries to moving everything from the basement to the first floor.
The president declared an emergency, that was a critical legal thing that opened the door to moving everything into the area where it had to be staged.
I had to somehow move everything I had to Chicago — including a car — and be in uniform the next day.
If you are finding things difficult to reach, move everything around until it is in a way that suits you best.
They can't move everything to Google Docs, which is limited to word processing documents and spreadsheets.
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