Fall

[ UK /fˈɔːl/ ]
[ US /ˈfɑɫ, ˈfɔɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the lapse of mankind into sinfulness because of the sin of Adam and Eve
    women have been blamed ever since the Fall
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How To Use Fall In A Sentence

  • She was all cold and bedraggled after falling into the river.
  • Gone was the prim nodus; instead her long hair was parted in the center and allowed to fall loose under a veil, in a deliberate echo of the statuary poses of classical goddesses. Caesars’ Wives
  • Moreover, it is expressly added that if the day before the Passover falls on a Sabbath, one may in this manner purchase a Paschal lamb, and, presumably, all else that is needful for the feast.
  • It also contains a series of waterfalls and cascades to further enhance the beauty of a hole that is certain to generate a lot of comment throughout the week.
  • ‘Of course, if you fail, and you have been put on that pedestal, it is a lot harder because you have further to fall,’ he said.
  • She strode over to a couple of fallen logs and kicked one of them.
  • A couple of weeks after the monarch's announcement, heavy rain began to fall, thus ending the drought.
  • The results were disastrous, plunging the country into deep depression, with high unemployment, sharply falling living standards and serious political unrest.
  • Plans include occasional stops at Central Terminal, which saw its last passenger train in 1979, and special excursions through the region to destinations such as Niagara Falls, Medina, Jamestown and even Cleveland. The Buffalo News: Home
  • For winemakers in the Rhone, 2002 was a disastrous year, with violent storms and huge rainfall during the harvest.
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