falling / fɔl /

下降下跌坠落跌落

falling4 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

fell, fall·en, fall·ing.

  1. to drop or descend under the force of gravity, as to a lower place through loss or lack of support.
  2. to come or drop down suddenly to a lower position, especially to leave a standing or erect position suddenly, whether voluntarily or not: to fall on one's knees.
  3. to become less or lower; become of a lower level, degree, amount, quality, value, number, etc.; decline: The temperature fell ten degrees. Stock prices fell to a new low for the year.
v. 有主动词 verb

fell, fall·en, fall·ing.

  1. to fell.
n. 名词 noun
  1. an act or instance of falling or dropping from a higher to a lower place or position.
  2. that which falls or drops: a heavy fall of rain.
  3. the season of the year that comes after summer and before winter; autumn.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. fall away, to withdraw support or allegiance: The candidate's supporters fell away when he advocated racial discrimination.to become lean or thin; diminish; decline.to forsake one's faith, cause, or principles: Many fell away because they were afraid of reprisals.
  2. fall back, to give way; recede; retreat: The relentless shelling forced the enemy to fall back.
  3. fall back on / upon Also fall back to .to retreat to: They fell back on their entrenchments. The troops fell back to their original position.to have recourse to; rely on: They had no savings to fall back on.

falling 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

dropping

falling构成的短语

  • falling down drunk
  • fall all over oneself
  • fall apart
  • fall asleep
  • fall away
  • fall back
  • fall back on
  • fall behind
  • fall between the cracks
  • fall by the wayside
  • fall down
  • fall flat
  • fall for
  • fall from grace
  • fall guy
  • fall in
  • fall in line
  • fall in love
  • fall in place
  • fall into
  • fall in with
  • fall off
  • fall off the wagon
  • fall on
  • fall on deaf ears
  • fall on one's face
  • fall on one's feet
  • fall out
  • fall over
  • fall short of
  • fall through
  • fall through the cracks
  • fall to
  • fall under
  • bottom drops (falls) out
  • break one's fall
  • easy as pie (falling off a log)
  • let drop (fall)
  • let the chips fall where they may
  • ride for a fall
  • take the fall

更多falling例句

  1. This fall’s back-to-school season is going to look very strange.
  2. Though that also means banks won’t provide price stabilization should the price fall in the first day of trading.
  3. For now, current regulations will not allow Cajon Valley’s program to open in the fall.
  4. I wanted to be one of them — and in the fall of 1982, I moved into Eton Towers, my first college dorm.
  5. They’re still figuring out how to handle orienting new students in the fall – a challenge they and other districts didn’t have in the spring.
  6. We also see her physically battling Sheriff Clark, but the camera focuses on her falling to the ground.
  7. The carpeting is worn, the furniture is falling apart, and the electricity is out for most of the day.
  8. Where these laser-like missiles are falling out of the sky onto a city and you have to stop each of them from hitting the targets?
  9. We have to use common sense inclusiveness, because we are quickly getting to a place where our brain is falling out.
  10. White, upper-middle-class, Ivy-League educated white men, however Great they are, are falling out of power.
  11. It will be no more monotonous than having one's seventh birthday or falling in love for the first time.
  12. For who, while tears are falling, will pause to handle the wreaths, and find whether they are genuine?
  13. The falling dew, and the howling wind raised him not from that bed of lonely despair.
  14. During his mild régime the insurrection increased rapidly, and in one encounter he himself was very near falling a prisoner.
  15. He walked about, stumbling over sticks and stones and stumps, sometimes falling down on soft moss, and again on the hard ground.