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fall
 (fôl)
KEY
VERB:
fell
(f  l)
KEY
,
fall·en
(fô  l  n)
KEY
,
fall·ing
,
falls
VERB:
intr.
- To drop or come down freely under the influence of gravity.
- To drop oneself to a lower or less erect position:
I fell back in my chair. The pilgrims fell to their knees.
-
- To lose an upright or erect position suddenly.
- To drop wounded or dead, especially in battle.
- To go or come as if by falling:
All grief fell from our hearts. Night fell quickly.
- To come to rest; settle:
The light fell on my book.
- To hang down:
The child's hair fell in ringlets.
- To be cast down:
Her eyes fell.
- To assume an expression of consternation or disappointment:
His face fell when he heard the report.
- To undergo conquest or capture, especially as the result of an armed attack:
The city fell after a long siege.
-
- To experience defeat or ruin:
After 300 years the dynasty fell.
- To lose office:
The disgraced prime minister fell from power.
- To slope downward:
The rolling hills fall gently toward the coast.
-
- To lessen in amount or degree:
The air pressure is falling.
- To decline in financial value:
Last year, stocks fell sharply.
- To diminish in pitch or volume:
My friend's voice fell to a whisper.
-
- To give in to temptation; sin.
-
Theology
To lose primordial innocence and happiness. Used of humanity as a result of the Fall.
- To lose one's chastity.
- To pass into a particular state, condition, or situation:
fell silent; fall in love.
- To occur at a specified time:
New Year's Day falls on a Tuesday this year.
- To occur at a specified place:
The stress falls on the last syllable.
- To come, as by chance:
fell among a band of thieves; a thought that fell into his mind.
-
- To be given by assignment or distribution:
The greatest task fell to me.
- To be given by right or inheritance.
- To be included within the range or scope of something:
The specimens fall into three categories.
- To come into contact; strike:
My gaze fell on a small book in the corner.
- To come out; issue:
Insincere compliments fell from their lips.
- To apply oneself:
fell to work immediately.
- To be born. Used chiefly of lambs.
VERB:
tr.
- To cut down (a tree); fell.
NOUN:
- The act or an instance of falling.
- A sudden drop from a relatively erect to a less erect position.
- Something that has fallen:
a fall of hail.
-
- An amount that has fallen:
a fall of two inches of rain.
- The distance that something falls:
The victim suffered a fall of three stories to the ground.
- Autumn.
-
falls
(used with a sing. or pl. verb) A waterfall.
- A downward movement or slope.
- Any of several pendent articles of dress, especially:
- A veil hung from a woman's hat and down her back.
- An ornamental cascade of lace or trimming attached to a dress, usually at the collar.
- A woman's hairpiece with long, free-hanging hair.
-
- An overthrow; a collapse:
the fall of a government.
- Armed capture of a place under siege:
the fall of Troy.
- A reduction in value, amount, or degree.
- A marked, often sudden, decline in status, rank, or importance:
"turned them in, set them up for prosecution; positioned them, as it were, for the fall"
(Joan Didion).
-
- A moral lapse.
- A loss of chastity.
- often
Fall
Theology
The loss of humanity's original innocence and happiness resulting from Adam and Eve's eating of the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden.
-
Sports
- The act of holding a wrestling opponent on his or her back so that the shoulders remain in contact with the mat for a designated period, usually one or two seconds, thereby winning the match.
Also called
pin
.
- Any of various wrestling maneuvers resulting in such an act.
-
Nautical
- A break or rise in the level of a deck.
-
falls
The apparatus used to hoist and transfer cargo or lifeboats.
- The end of a cable, rope, or chain that is pulled by the power source in hoisting.
-
- The birth of an animal, especially a lamb.
- All the animals born at one birth; a litter.
- A family of woodcock in flight. See Synonyms at flock
1.
-
Botany
The outer series of perianth in the irises and related plants.
ADJECTIVE:
- Of, having to do with, occurring in, or appropriate to the season of fall:
fall fashion; fall harvests.
- Grown during the season of fall:
fall crops.
PHRASAL VERBS:
fall apart
- To break down; collapse:
The rickety chair fell apart.
- To suffer a nervous breakdown:
He fell apart after years as a POW.
fall away
- To withdraw one's friendship and support.
- To become gradually diminished in size.
- To drift off an established course.
- To lose weight.
fall back
- To give ground; retreat.
- To recede:
The waves fell back.
fall behind
- To fail to keep up a pace; lag behind.
- To be financially in arrears.
fall down
- To fail to meet expectations; lag in performance:
fell down on the job.
fall for
- To feel love for; be in love with.
- To be deceived or swindled by:
fell for the con artist's scheme and lost $200,000.
fall in
- To take one's place in a military formation.
- To sink inward; cave in:
The roof of the old barn fell in.
fall off
- To become less; decrease:
Stock prices have fallen off. The number of staff meetings fell off after a few months.
- To lose weight:
Toward the end of the dry season, the cattle fall off rapidly.
-
Nautical
To change course to leeward.
fall on
or
upon
- To attack suddenly and viciously:
Snipers and irregulars fell on the hapless patrol.
- To meet with; encounter:
a stockbroker who fell on hard times.
fall out
-
- To leave a barracks, for example, in order to take one's place in a military formation.
- To leave a military formation.
- To quarrel:
The siblings fell out over their inheritance.
- To happen; occur.
- To be readily explainable; follow logically or naturally:
These facts fall out nicely from the new theory.
fall through
- To fail; miscarry:
Our plans fell through at the last minute.
fall to
- To begin an activity energetically:
"The press fell to with a will"
(Russell Baker).
IDIOMS:
fall back
on
/upon
- To rely on:
fall back on old friends in time of need.
- To resort to:
I had to fall back on my savings when I was unemployed.
fall between (the) two stools
- To fail because of an inability to reconcile or choose between two courses of action.
fall flat
- To fail miserably when attempting to achieve a result.
- To have no effect:
The jokes fell flat.
fall
foul
/afoul
-
Nautical
To collide. Used of vessels.
- To clash:
fell foul of the law.
fall from grace
- To experience a major reduction in status or prestige.
fall into line
- To adhere to established rules or predetermined courses of action.
fall in with
- To agree with or be in harmony with:
Their views fall in with ours.
- To associate or begin to associate with:
fell in with the wrong crowd.
fall on deaf ears
- To go unheeded; be ignored completely:
"Moscow's own familiar charges . . . will also fall on deaf ears"
(Foreign Affairs).
fall over
backward
/backwards
- To overexert oneself to do or accomplish something:
We fell over backward to complete the project on time.
fall over (oneself)
- To display inordinate, typically effusive, enthusiasm:
fell over themselves to impress the general's wife.
fall prey to
- To be put into such a vulnerable position as to be at risk of harm, destruction, or invasion:
a person who fell prey to swindlers; did not want the country to fall prey to terrorists.
fall short
- To fail to attain a specified amount, level, or degree:
an athlete whose skill fell far short of expectations.
- To prove inadequate:
Food supplies fell short.
fall through the cracks
- To pass unnoticed, neglected, or unchecked:
"In the past, many learning disabled children fell through the cracks"
(Judith Harkness Richardson).
ETYMOLOGY:
Middle English fallen, from Old English feallan
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