They were forced to move out of their home in the upmarket Morningside area of Edinburgh. |
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So if the airplane is travelling faster than the speed of sound, the air cannot move out of the way. |
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Last year they put the fear of God in us that our homes were going to fall down around our ears and that we would need to move out immediately. |
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The Rajputs fought back, during which groups of people were displaced or forced to move out of desolated areas. |
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She wanted to more than double her income, and she was itching to move out of her 2,400-square-foot split-level home in the suburbs. |
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Once up and running, they are expected to move out of the centre and into the business park or other nearby premises. |
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Macedonians move out of apartment blocks and neighbourhoods populated by Albanians. |
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The four shuttles quickly lifted off and buzzed back toward Base-One, leaving the marines to move out. |
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Azhion rode up in front of them all, told them to mount up, and gave the hand signal for all to move out. |
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Instead, he had sent Afan on to rally the forces left in Nottingham to move out and meet Arthur in battle once more. |
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Nothing can move out of the task force without an affirmative vote of its private-sector members. |
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Well, you're talking about millions trying to move out of harm's way and the fact the storm is moving very slowly. |
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They're continuing to move out of harm's way into safer regions of the state. |
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On reaching the pedestrian area three dismounted and one carried on regardless making shoppers move out of her way. |
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They were forced to move out of their home, in the upmarket Morningside area of Edinburgh, and into care when old age caught up with them. |
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He was then standing in the street ranting and raving and my dad asked him to move out the way, and the guy said he would be back. |
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Older people with greater income and more assets tend to move out of the city and into suburbs. |
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Superannuants will inevitably have to move out of those areas to be able to live and afford to pay their way. |
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Fans want to know where the money went from three separate share issues, and why Milne is so keen to move out of Pittodrie. |
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Not hearing any, I open the door and move out into the hall and over to my parents' closed bedroom door. |
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I decided that I want to turn my old desk into a writing desk when I move out. |
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I have books and since I had to move out of my previous home, many of them are still boxed up. |
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I turned to move out of the lunch with my yummy food towards the table Hyori was sitting at. |
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Neighborhood disorder leads honest people to move out of the neighborhood or to lock themselves in their homes. |
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I would suggest that they move out of their cosy offices and tour the area to see for themselves what is not only an eyesore but a health hazard. |
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The rules are not retrospective, but it will mean people who use trusts in the future will be forced to sell up, move out, or pay the tax. |
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I could move out of New South Wales to a state where petrol isn't as extortionately priced, such as Queensland. |
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You move out of deep sleep and into light sleep several times during the night, resulting in poor sleep quality. |
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In particular, would she be entitled to claim any compensation if I asked her to move out either now or in the future? |
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They think laws don't apply to them, rules were meant for them to break and everyone should move out of their way when the come through. |
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At feeding time, the dominant mare will walk up to the feed trough and pin her ears back, immediately all the other horses move out of her road. |
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Mr Ellis had set up a training consultancy in Bath and the couple were looking to move out of London. |
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We were elated to move out of the apartment and into this house with all these rooms. |
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In the 1970s and 1980s, gang culture was endemic with virtually every small business forced to pay protection money or move out. |
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She soon managed to move out of the refuge and turned her attention to following her dream. |
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When they get around to fixing the cosmetic cracks in the gib you have to move out of the house. |
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In most Europeans cities, the shops have had to move out into less salubrious neighborhoods, which is a shame. |
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There is a need for them to move out of the hustle and bustle and beat the stress, preferably with family, as often as they can. |
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Next month they will have to move out of their two-bedroom maisonette in Elm Tree Gardens which they have had on a short-term tenancy. |
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The task force was ready to leave Kuwait, to move out north, to drive on to Baghdad. |
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While most bands head across the Tasman to Australia when they want to make the big move out of NZ, The D4 picked Japan as their destination. |
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Within one month of receiving the hike notice, send your landlord a letter saying you do not intend to renew your lease and then move out. |
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The ambulance instantly ground to a halt and the driver leaned out of his window and screamed for Patrick to move out of the way. |
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What they'll try to do is either decoy us or create a diversion, something to get us to respond, to move out of the area where they want to go. |
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We also have a major stake in that country's success in its effort to move out of its isolationist setting. |
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The Government has been claiming that it wants more of its departments to decentralise and move out of London. |
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We have to move out in two weeks and so the landlord is letting people view the property. |
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The deanery at Windsor was attacked and Christopher's father was forced to move out. |
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The high velocity allows condensed droplets to move out of the way so that new ones can form. |
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Gender inequality shapes different experiences of poverty and impacts on women and men's ability to move out of poverty. |
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Police in Keighley are pressing ahead with a controversial proposal to move out of the town centre. |
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When you move out, leave a written forwarding address for your ex-landlord. |
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Whether Gandhi made her move out of shrewd calculation or simple magnanimity, it was a political master stroke. |
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I would probably have to move out here alone and live pretty modestly so that we could save up some money and pay down the debts back home. |
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My dad's been wanting me to move out ever since the heat lamp for my pet mog almost burned the house down. |
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But he finally got shut of the shop, enabling him to move out of the area, when the Mini-Mart and three-bedroom maisonette was sold. |
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I look forward most of all to arranging my library and my writing space when I move out. |
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The infantry may be employing the tank as cover just as the tank crew decides to move out or change position. |
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And then as the afternoon wore on, they'd move out and sit on the verandah and look out at the garden beyond. |
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Next door, her neighbours have decided to sell their apartment and move out of the city altogether. |
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I will move out a week later and Bryn will get the best upgrade possible, from the smallest room to the second-biggest but most sunny room. |
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This was partly, it seems, due to his own desire to finish school and his hesitancy to move out to Palo Alto. |
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Sylvia insisted that Ted move out and he complied, going to stay in London. |
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We are worried that Russia will move out from Crimea and endanger the whole country. |
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Two persons running away with the cash and revenue stamps were caught even before they could move out of the building, other two members of the gang escaped. |
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He saw Jim try to move out of the line of fire, but it was too late. |
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I'd like to tell my teammates to hold this position while I take a few forward and assault another location, but I can't control them at all, so I move out alone. |
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So quit wasting your breath, forget her and move out of my way. |
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And then the students move on and the staff move out, which must be gutting, given the alternative accommodation is a purpose-built campus in Hendon. |
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It was by trading Baltic amber for metals with more advanced peoples that the Neolithic peoples of the Baltic region were enabled to move out of the Stone Age. |
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Twenty-four-year-old Max Priestley, a police officer based at Epsom, has been forced to move out of a flat in Stoneleigh and into a section house in Addlestone. |
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Traders in Castle Place precinct have vowed to stand firm against any pressure to move out as new plans for a major retail and leisure complex remain in the melting pot. |
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In short, the agenda is all encompassing and all stakeholders should support the process to move out of the current problems besetting the country. |
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Besides more room to load, still being a farmer at heart I like to have trailers usable for many purposes, like hauling hay and helping the kids move out. |
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While he was struggling in late 1796 to move out of his mental and spiritual despair, Wordsworth wrote the eerie and largely unstageable play The Borderers. |
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I'm going to move out of this house when my contract is up next year. |
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On gaining a bump, crews move out of the way and cease racing. |
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A reciprocating saw, as the name implies, utilizes interchangeable blades that move out and back in a reciprocating motion, in much the same action as using a handsaw. |
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Her house was demolished to make way for a new tram station, even though she did not want to leave it and hung on until she was the last resident in her street to move out. |
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The bolt mass and the bullet weight work together to limit the amount the case is allowed to move out of the chamber while the bullet is still in the bore. |
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London has always drawn in the poor and hopeful, and churned out the richer and more successful, who move out because they are worried about raising children in the city. |
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The artillery attack was a violation of the unilateral cease-fire announced by the LTTE themselves to allow civilians to move out of the embattled zone, the statement said. |
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Her world turns upside down when her roommate and bff, Sophie, meets a fella and decides to move out. |
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Speculations are rife in the tinsel town that the acting legend might move out of Chennai to his new home in Coimbatore. |
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We watched them silently, too debilitated to even move out of their way. |
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With the onset of the Industrial Revolution, people began to move out of the country and into towns and cities to find work. |
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At the beginning of 1935 he had to move out of Warwick Mansions, and Mabel Fierz found him a flat in Parliament Hill. |
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They have to move out of their house because the bank foreclosed on their mortgage. |
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George wanted to move into the Ranger's House by the castle, but his brother, Henry was already living in it and refused to move out. |
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The watery sap of the sugar maple also begins to move out of the roots and up into the branches and leaves of the trees. |
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This is in order to give the people laying the mines sufficient time to move out of its activation and blast zones. |
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At around seven to twelve days old, the chicks begin to move out of their nests and explore their surroundings. |
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Now, with flatter organizations, promotions may be less available so you may have to move out to move up. |
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We must move out before the end of the month or we'll be paying extra rent. |
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The attack happened after Almery, 31, assaulted his girlfriend, who had earlier told him she wanted to move out of the apartment they shared in the complex. |
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Defender Chris Baird struck twice early in the first half to help Fulham move out of the relegation zone and ease the pressure on manager Mark Hughes. |
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We move out of the trees and up a little rise where we can better see the sky, which is slate blue with a flaming rosy glow that fades to the palest pinkwashed gold. |
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When those big bands take off, the mares never come back for those leppies. We were branding one time and saw a little bunch move out and a mom left a leppy behind. |
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Neil Martin, 46, was crushed when a cherry-picker machine he was helping move out of Edinburgh's Waverley Station on March 21, 2006, ran over him. |
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