1
general::
Phrase(s): move someone or something out (of some place)
to cause someone to depart or leave; to carry someone or something out of a place. • Move those people out of here. They are crowding up the room. • Please move all that stuff out., Phrase(s): move out (from under someone or something)
Go to out (from under someone or something)., Phrase(s): move out (of some place)
1. to leave a place; to leave; to begin to depart. (Especially in reference to a large number of persons or things.) • The crowd started to move out of the area about midnight. • They had moved out by one o’clock. 2. to leave a place of residence permanently. • We didn’t like the neighborhood, so we moved out of it. • We moved out because we were unhappy.
McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs