VERB
-
fall in love with; become infatuated with
She fell for the man from Brazil -
be deceived, duped, or entrapped by
He fell for her charms
He fell for the con man's story
How To Use fall for In A Sentence
- When you're that kind of player, it must be so fun to play against no-marks who fall for every stepover, trick, flick and shimmy.
- And he wasn't about fall for the trap the country bumpkins at Auburn laid for him.
- If the above seems to create an "unfair" windfall for stockholders or short term diminution of tax revenues, raise the capital gains rates. Al Checchi: Government's Travels
- Programmers, the technologically innovative subclass of the creative, theoretically have it better: information technology remains a seller's market, with companies reporting an ongoing recruiting shortfall for IT new hires.
- But please, please do not again fall for the blandishments of peer pressure without asking why.
- If you think I'd fall for your line, you've got another thing going, buster!
- Now that global mobile phone sales have started to fall for the first time ever, producers may well have to turn predator in order to win market share.
- I still want him to fall for me afterward - should I just wear something regular, something that shows off my figure, dress up, or go grunge?
- The old illustrator never let his pupils fall for the pathetic fallacy, that empty barrels are lonely.
- While it is absurd to think the public would fall for something so outlandish as to say that one of the building blocks of life is a poison, you must remember that many agreed to ban water under it's scientific name dihydrogen monoxide. WHAT REALLY HAPPENED