From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmove out phrasal verb1 LEAVE YOUR HOME/COUNTRYto leave the house where you are living now in order to go and live somewhere else OPP move in He moved out, and a year later they were divorced. of They moved out of London when he was little.2 LEAVE A PLACEif a group of soldiers moves out, they leave a place3 American English spoken to leave Are you ready to move out? → move→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
move out• Diana and I aren't together any more. I've moved out.• If the landlord raises the rent again, we'll just have to move out.• Tom moved out of his apartment in Toronto last month.move of• Thirty years later, I am in academia myself and realize now that people are moved out of Department Chair positions regularly.• Lola moved out of her parents' house when she was 18.• For that reason, the training encourages officers to either close in tighter on a combative suspect or move out of range.• I notice a waterspout at the horizon, and watch it until it moves out of sight.• In the last six months, increasingly more money has moved out of stocks in the Standard.• He said he moved out of the bedroom after Louie admitted to him the drugs were his.• Ellie had told me, two weeks after renting her apartment, that soon she would move out of the cabin.• The two ships behind me moved out of the fire, too.• It only really started when everybody began moving out of the house.