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Synonyms for get a move on
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : moov |
Phonetic Transcription : muv |
Top 10 synonyms for get a move on Other synonyms for the word get a move on
- accelerate
- aid
- assist
- awake
- awaken
- barrel
- be quick
- be up and about
- beeline
- belt
- bestir
- blow
- bomb
- bowl over
- breeze
- budge
- bullet
- burst
- bustle
- career
- clear out
- cover ground
- cut along
- decamp
- dig in
- dispatch
- drive
- exert
- expedite
- flash
- fleet
- flit
- fly
- fly the coop
- gallop
- gather momentum
- gear up
- get a move on
- get cracking
- get going
- get it on
- get moving
- get under way
- go all out
- go fast
- go like lightning
- go like the wind
- goad
- haste
- hasten
- hightail
- hightail it
- hop to it
- hurry
- hurry up
- impel
- leave
- look alive
- lose no time
- make an effort
- make haste
- make it snappy
- make oneself scarce
- make short work of
- make time
- make tracks
- mill about
- move
- move fast
- nip
- open up throttle
- press on
- promote
- push
- quicken
- quicken one's speed
- race
- ride
- rip
- rocket
- roll
- rouse
- run
- run like the wind
- rush
- sail
- sally
- scamper
- scat
- scoot
- scramble
- scurry
- shake a leg
- shoot
- skedaddle
- smoke
- snap to it
- speed
- speed up
- split
- spring
- sprint
- spur
- step on gas
- step on it
- take off
- tear
- turn on steam
- urge
- vamoose
- wake
- waken
- whirl
- whish
- whisk
- whiz
- zip
- zoom
Définition of get a move on
Origin :- late 13c., from Anglo-French mover, Old French movoir "to move, get moving, set out; set in motion; introduce" (Modern French mouvoir), from Latin movere "move, set in motion; remove; disturb" (past participle motus, frequentative motare), from PIE root *meue- "to push away" (cf. Sanskrit kama-muta "moved by love" and probably mivati "pushes, moves;" Lithuanian mauti "push on;" Greek ameusasthai "to surpass," amyno "push away").
- Intransitive sense developed in Old French and came thence to English, though it now is rare in French. Meaning "to affect with emotion" is from c.1300; that of "to prompt or impel toward some action" is from late 14c. Sense of "to change one's place of residence" is from 1707. Meaning "to propose (something) in an assembly, etc.," is first attested mid-15c. Related: Moved; moving.
- As in scoot : verb hurry
- As in skedaddle : verb flee
- As in speed : verb move along quickly
- As in stir : verb get up and going
- As in : verb move at a faster pace
- As in festinate : verb rush
- As in get the lead out : verb hurry
- As in hurry : verb act, move speedily
Antonyms for get a move on
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019