Verb
to continue without being distracted; to keep going
(figuratively, by extension) to proceed; to make or signify progress
the construction project is moving along
(figuratively, by extension) to go on to something else
the committee moved along to the next item on the agenda
If you meet someone whose soul is not aligned with yours, send them love and move along. Wayne W. Dyer
The sooner we can separate salvageable skeptics from self-righteous absolutists, the sooner we can move along. Sheri S. Tepper
You reach deep down and bring up what feels absolutely authentic to you as you move along with the book, but you don't know everything about it. You can't. Anne Rice
You're just playing, playing, playing, and then an image or something will come into your mind, and basically you're just narrating it with music, letting it move along. Edie Brickell
The further institutional designers try to move along the continuum toward explicit proactive systems that force integration in exclusionary and racist societies, the more they will learn about how much redesign of ethnic antipathy is feasible in them. Ian Shapiro
Don't look at the downside of everything that comes along. It helps life move along so much smoother and nicer. George Smathers