V1 |
fall | be cast down | |
V1 |
fall | occur at a specified time or place | |
V2, V3 |
fall, light | fall to somebody by assignment or lot; passed | |
V1 |
fall | be born, used chiefly of lambs | |
V1 |
decrease, diminish, lessen, fall | decrease in size, extent, or range | |
V2 |
fall, strike, shine | touch or seem as if touching visually or audibly | |
|
fall, pin | when a wrestler's shoulders are forced to the mat | |
V1, V2 |
fall, come down, precipitate | fall from clouds | |
V1 |
fall | be due | |
|
drop, fall, dip, free fall | a sudden sharp decrease in some quantity | |
V2 |
fall, accrue | come into the possession of | |
|
fall, drop | a free and rapid descent by the force of gravity | |
|
fall, autumn | the season when the leaves fall from the trees | |
V1 |
fall, come | come under, be classified or included | |
|
fall | a movement to a lower level | |
V1 |
fall | lose office or power | |
V1 |
fall, descend, settle | come as if by falling | |
|
fall, downfall | a sudden decline in strength or number or importance | |
V2 |
hang, flow, fall | fall or flow in a certain way | |
|
waterfall, falls, fall | a steep descent of the water of a river | |
V1 |
fall, come down, descend, go down | move downward and lower, but not necessarily all the way | |
V1 |
fall, fall down | lose an upright position suddenly | |
|
fall, spill, tumble | a sudden drop from an upright position | |
V1, V2 |
fall | pass suddenly and passively into a state of body or mind | |
V1 |
fall | come out; issue | |
V1 |
fall | yield to temptation or sin | |
V1 |
fall | move in a specified direction | |
V1 |
fall | lose one's chastity | |
|
fall, capitulation, surrender | the act of surrendering (usually under agreed conditions) | |
V1 |
fall, lengthen | assume a disappointed or sad expression | |
V1 |
fall | be captured | |
V1 |
fall | begin vigorously | |
V1 |
fall | die, as in battle or in a hunt | |
V2 |
pass, devolve, fall, return | be inherited by | |
|
dusk, nightfall, twilight, fall, gloaming, gloam, evenfall, crepuscule, crepuscle | the time of day immediately following sunset | |
V1 |
fall | go as if by falling | |
V1 |
fall | to be given by right or inheritance | |
V1 |
fall | descend in free fall under the influence of gravity | |
|
Fall | the lapse of mankind into sinfulness because of the sin of Adam and Eve | |
|
fall, declivity, descent, declination, declension, decline, downslope | a downward slope or bend | |
V1 |
fall | to be given by assignment or distribution | |
V1 |
fall | suffer defeat, failure, or ruin | |
V1 |
fall | slope downward | |
|
fall | a lapse into sin; a loss of innocence or of chastity | |
V1 |
fall | drop oneself to a lower or less erect position |