fall-off in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for fall-off in the English»Spanish Dictionary (Go to Spanish»English)

falloff [Am ˈfɔlɑf, Brit] N no pl (in speed)

fall off VB [Am fɔl -, Brit fɔːl -] (v + adv)

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Translations for fall-off in the Spanish»English Dictionary (Go to English»Spanish)

fall-off in the PONS Dictionary

British English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
This course consists of two ovals side by side, with the first oval leading to a fall-off section above the starting line and the second oval going back down.
en.wikipedia.org
Making recordings of lectures freely available to students could lead to a fall-off in attendance of the live lectures themselves.
theconversation.com
The final years of the thirteenth century had seen a dramatic fall-off in the upper level of the nobility, as six earls had died from 1295 to 1298.
en.wikipedia.org
Retail stores and restaurants don't expect a fall-off of foot traffic after the holiday either.
journalstar.com
The rate coefficients and products of many high-temperature gas-phase reactions change if an inert gas is added to the mixture; variations on this effect are called fall-off and chemical activation.
en.wikipedia.org
He says there has been an inevitable fall-off.
www.independent.ie
And it was also fall-off-the-couch hilarious.
en.wikipedia.org
There wasn't much fall-off in 1971-72.
en.wikipedia.org
But it would be minimal as it would be outstripped by the fall-off in male participation rates.
www.independent.ie
Public inebriation, nudity, and calls for assistance for unconscious individuals are common; a fall-off due to increased policing in the 1990s proved short-lived.
en.wikipedia.org

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