Verb
move off (third-person singular simple present moves off, present participle moving off, simple past and past participle moved off)
(of a vehicle) To start moving.
In the clip shared first on TikTok and then reposted on Twitter, she can be seen instructing Iona on how to properly move off. Source: Internet
The confusion prevented the remaining two battalions of the 18th RCT from landing until 13:00, and delayed the move off the beach of all but 2/18, which had exited the beach further east before noon, until 14:00. Source: Internet
The Bucks delivered a double-team move off the top rope, the Motor City Machine Gun’s finisher, which Excalibur referenced. Source: Internet
It will then pause, prick its ears, twisting its head to listen, then jump and move off to start foraging. Source: Internet
SNAP 50/50 partnerships come at no cost to the commonwealth and “create great value by helping participants gain valuable career skills that can help them find a career path and move off public assistance like SNAP and reach self-sufficiency. Source: Internet
In recent years, the thunder behind Thunderbird got a little quieter, and in mid-2017 the project announced it would move off Mozilla's infrastructure, but keep the Mozilla Foundation as its legal and fiscal home. Source: Internet