fall in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for fall in the English»Bulgarian Dictionary

II.fall <fell, fallen> [fɔːl] N

III.fall <fell, fallen> [fɔːl] ADJ Am

fall-off [ˈfɔːlɒf, Am -ɑːf] N

fall Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to come [or fall], apart at the seams fig
to experience a decline [or fall], in prices ECON

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
And things go really bad, their lives kind of fall apart.
en.wikipedia.org
Complaints about politicians fraternizing with extremists (see first observation) fall flat when the extremists are clearly welcome in the larger community.
www.straight.com
Scientific research has found that gripping strength is far greater using a horizontal bar than a vertical bar in a fall situation.
en.wikipedia.org
Architects tell us it would fall down if we interfered with it too much.
en.wikipedia.org
The final fall of the match came to a confusing end with a finish that upset a lot of the fans in the arena.
en.wikipedia.org
There are two extreme views on how to render accounts for such deals, and most accounting practices fall somewhere in the spectrum in between.
en.wikipedia.org
It also closes midweek and some weekends during the late fall, winter, and early spring.
en.wikipedia.org
This represented a fall in circulation of 14% on a year-on-year basis.
en.wikipedia.org
The rules have even been blamed for a fall-off in retail sales, suggesting people are saving for house deposits instead of spending money.
www.independent.ie
You are like their spare tyre or a backup they fall on, not who they want to settle with.
www.ghanaweb.com

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