DICT.TW Dictionary Taiwan
216.73.216.121
Search for:
Search type:
Return Definitions
Match headwords exactly
Match prefixes
Match prefixes (skip, count)
Match substring occurring anywhere in a headword
Match suffixes
POSIX 1003.2 (modern) regular expressions
Old (basic) regular expressions
Match using SOUNDEX algorithm
Match headwords within Levenshtein distance one
Match separate words within headwords
Match the first word within headwords
Match the last word within headwords
Database:
Any
First match
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
DICT.TW 注音查詢、中文輸入法字典
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
Network Terminology
MDBG CC-CEDICT Chinese-English Dictionary 漢英字典
Japanese-English Electronic Dictionary 和英電子辞書
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
WordNet (r) 2.0
Elements database 20001107
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
▼
[Show options]
[
Pronunciation
] [
Help
] [
Database Info
] [
Server Info
]
6 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
fall
/ˈfɔl/
秋天,落下,瀑布,採伐量,下降,落差,降低,墮落(
vi
.)倒下,落下,來臨,失守
From:
Network Terminology
fall
降
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Fall
v. i.
[
imp.
Fell
p. p.
Fallen
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Falling
.]
1.
To
Descend
,
either
suddenly
or
gradually
;
particularly
,
to
descend
by
the
force
of
gravity
;
to
drop
;
to
sink
;
as
,
the
apple
falls
;
the
tide
falls
;
the
mercury
falls
in
the
barometer
.
I
beheld
Satan
as
lightning
fall
from
heaven
.
--
Luke
x
. 18.
2.
To
cease
to
be
erect
;
to
take
suddenly
a
recumbent
posture
;
to
become
prostrate
;
to
drop
;
as
,
a
child
totters
and
falls
;
a
tree
falls
;
a
worshiper
falls
on
his
knees
.
I
fell
at
his
feet
to
worship
him
.
--
Rev
.
xix
. 10.
3.
To
find
a
final
outlet
;
to
discharge
its
waters
;
to
empty
; --
with
into
;
as
,
the
river
Rhone
falls
into
the
Mediterranean
.
4.
To
become
prostrate
and
dead
;
to
die
;
especially
,
to
die
by
violence
,
as
in
battle
.
A
thousand
shall
fall
at
thy
side
.
--
Ps
.
xci
. 7.
He
rushed
into
the
field
,
and
,
foremost
fighting
,
fell
.
--
Byron
.
5.
To
cease
to
be
active
or
strong
;
to
die
away
;
to
lose
strength
;
to
subside
;
to
become
less
intense
;
as
,
the
wind
falls
.
6.
To
issue
forth
into
life
;
to
be
brought
forth
; --
said
of
the
young
of
certain
animals
.
7.
To
decline
in
power
,
glory
,
wealth
,
or
importance
;
to
become
insignificant
;
to
lose
rank
or
position
;
to
decline
in
weight
,
value
,
price
etc
.;
to
become
less
;
as
,
the
price
falls
;
stocks
fell
two
points
.
I
am
a
poor
fallen
man
,
unworthy
now
To
be
thy
lord
and
master
. --
Shak
.
The
greatness
of
these
Irish
lords
suddenly
fell
and
vanished
.
--
Sir
J
.
Davies
.
8.
To
be
overthrown
or
captured
;
to
be
destroyed
.
Heaven
and
earth
will
witness
,
If
Rome
must
fall
,
that
we
are
innocent
. --
Addison
.
9.
To
descend
in
character
or
reputation
;
to
become
degraded
;
to
sink
into
vice
,
error
,
or
sin
;
to
depart
from
the
faith
;
to
apostatize
;
to
sin
.
Let
us
labor
therefore
to
enter
into
that
rest
,
lest
any
man
fall
after
the
same
example
of
unbelief
.
--
Heb
.
iv
. 11.
10.
To
become
insnared
or
embarrassed
;
to
be
entrapped
;
to
be
worse
off
than
before
;
as
,
to
fall
into
error
;
to
fall
into
difficulties
.
11.
To
assume
a
look
of
shame
or
disappointment
;
to
become
or
appear
dejected
; --
said
of
the
countenance
.
Cain
was
very
wroth
,
and
his
countenance
fell
.
--
Gen
.
iv
. 5.
I
have
observed
of
late
thy
looks
are
fallen
.
--
Addison
.
12.
To
sink
;
to
languish
;
to
become
feeble
or
faint
;
as
,
our
spirits
rise
and
fall
with
our
fortunes
.
13.
To
pass
somewhat
suddenly
,
and
passively
,
into
a
new
state
of
body
or
mind
;
to
become
;
as
,
to
fall
asleep
;
to
fall
into
a
passion
;
to
fall
in
love
;
to
fall
into
temptation
.
14.
To
happen
;
to
to
come
to
pass
;
to
light
;
to
befall
;
to
issue
;
to
terminate
.
The
Romans
fell
on
this
model
by
chance
.
--
Swift
.
Sit
still
,
my
daughter
,
until
thou
know
how
the
matter
will
fall
.
--
Ruth
.
iii
. 18.
They
do
not
make
laws
,
they
fall
into
customs
.
--
H
.
Spencer
.
15.
To
come
;
to
occur
;
to
arrive
.
The
vernal
equinox
,
which
at
the
Nicene
Council
fell
on
the
21st
of
March
,
falls
now
[1694]
about
ten
days
sooner
.
--
Holder
.
16.
To
begin
with
haste
,
ardor
,
or
vehemence
;
to
rush
or
hurry
;
as
,
they
fell
to
blows
.
They
now
no
longer
doubted
,
but
fell
to
work
heart
and
soul
.
--
Jowett
(
Thucyd
. ).
17.
To
pass
or
be
transferred
by
chance
,
lot
,
distribution
,
inheritance
,
or
otherwise
;
as
,
the
estate
fell
to
his
brother
;
the
kingdom
fell
into
the
hands
of
his
rivals
.
18.
To
belong
or
appertain
.
If
to
her
share
some
female
errors
fall
,
Look
on
her
face
,
and
you'll
forget
them
all
. --
Pope
.
19.
To
be
dropped
or
uttered
carelessly
;
as
,
an
unguarded
expression
fell
from
his
lips
;
not
a
murmur
fell
from
him
.
To fall abroad of
Naut.
,
to
strike
against
; --
applied
to
one
vessel
coming
into
collision
with
another
.
To fall among
,
to
come
among
accidentally
or
unexpectedly
.
To fall astern
Naut.
,
to
move
or
be
driven
backward
;
to
be
left
behind
;
as
,
a
ship
falls
astern
by
the
force
of
a
current
,
or
when
outsailed
by
another
.
To fall away
.
(a)
To
lose
flesh
;
to
become
lean
or
emaciated
;
to
pine
.
(b)
To
renounce
or
desert
allegiance
;
to
revolt
or
rebel
.
(c)
To
renounce
or
desert
the
faith
;
to
apostatize
.
“These . . .
for
a
while
believe
,
and
in
time
of
temptation
fall
away
.”
--
Luke
viii
. 13.
(d)
To
perish
;
to
vanish
;
to
be
lost
.
“How . . .
can
the
soul
. . .
fall
away
into
nothing?”
--
Addison
.
(e)
To
decline
gradually
;
to
fade
;
to
languish
,
or
become
faint
.
“One
color
falls
away
by
just
degrees
,
and
another
rises
insensibly.”
--
Addison
.
To fall back
.
(a)
To
recede
or
retreat
;
to
give
way
.
(b)
To
fail
of
performing
a
promise
or
purpose
;
not
to
fulfill
.
To fall back upon
or
To fall back on
.
(a)
Mil.
To
retreat
for
safety
to
(
a
stronger
position
in
the
rear
,
as
to
a
fort
or
a
supporting
body
of
troops
).
(b)
To
have
recourse
to
(
a
reserved
fund
,
a
more
reliable
alternative
,
or
some
other
available
expedient
or
support
).
To fall calm
,
to
cease
to
blow
;
to
become
calm
.
To fall down
.
(a)
To
prostrate
one's
self
in
worship
.
“All
kings
shall
fall
down
before
him.”
--
Ps
.
lxxii
. 11.
(b)
To
sink
;
to
come
to
the
ground
.
“
Down
fell
the
beauteous
youth.”
--
Dryden
.
(c)
To
bend
or
bow
,
as
a
suppliant
.
(d)
Naut.
To
sail
or
drift
toward
the
mouth
of
a
river
or
other
outlet
.
To fall flat
,
to
produce
no
response
or
result
;
to
fail
of
the
intended
effect
;
as
,
his
speech
fell
flat
.
To fall foul of
.
(a)
Naut.
To
have
a
collision
with
;
to
become
entangled
with
(b)
To
attack
;
to
make
an
assault
upon
.
To fall from
,
to
recede
or
depart
from
;
not
to
adhere
to
;
as
,
to
fall
from
an
agreement
or
engagement
;
to
fall
from
allegiance
or
duty
.
To fall from grace
M.
E
. Ch.
,
to
sin
;
to
withdraw
from
the
faith
.
To fall home
Ship Carp.
,
to
curve
inward
; --
said
of
the
timbers
or
upper
parts
of
a
ship's
side
which
are
much
within
a
perpendicular
.
To fall in
.
(a)
To
sink
inwards
;
as
,
the
roof
fell
in
.
(b)
Mil.
To
take
one's
proper
or
assigned
place
in
line
;
as
,
to
fall
in
on
the
right
.
(c)
To
come
to
an
end
;
to
terminate
;
to
lapse
;
as
,
on
the
death
of
Mr
.
B
.,
the
annuuity
,
which
he
had
so
long
received
,
fell in
.
(d)
To
become
operative
.
“The
reversion
,
to
which
he
had
been
nominated
twenty
years
before
,
fell
in
.”
--
Macaulay
.
To fall into one's hands
,
to
pass
,
often
suddenly
or
unexpectedly
,
into
one's
ownership
or
control
;
as
,
to
spike
cannon
when
they
are
likely
to
fall
into
the
hands
of
the
enemy
.
To fall in with
.
(a)
To
meet
with
accidentally
;
as
,
to
fall
in
with
a
friend
.
(b)
Naut.
To
meet
,
as
a
ship
;
also
,
to
discover
or
come
near
,
as
land
.
(c)
To
concur
with
;
to
agree
with
;
as
,
the
measure
falls
in
with
popular
opinion
.
(d)
To
comply
;
to
yield
to
.
“You
will
find
it
difficult
to
persuade
learned
men
to
fall
in
with
your
projects.”
--
Addison
.
To fall off
.
(a)
To
drop
;
as
,
fruits
fall
off
when
ripe
.
(b)
To
withdraw
;
to
separate
;
to
become
detached
;
as
,
friends
fall
off
in
adversity
.
“Love
cools
,
friendship
falls
off
,
brothers
divide.”
--
Shak
.
(c)
To
perish
;
to
die
away
;
as
,
words
fall
off
by
disuse
.
(d)
To
apostatize
;
to
forsake
;
to
withdraw
from
the
faith
,
or
from
allegiance
or
duty
.
Those
captive
tribes
. . .
fell off
From
God
to
worship
calves
. --
Milton
.
(e)
To
forsake
;
to
abandon
;
as
,
his
customers
fell
off
.
(f)
To
depreciate
;
to
change
for
the
worse
;
to
deteriorate
;
to
become
less
valuable
,
abundant
,
or
interesting
;
as
,
a
falling
off
in
the
wheat
crop
;
the
magazine
or
the
review
falls
off
.
“O
Hamlet
,
what
a
falling
off
was
there!”
--
Shak
.
(g)
Naut.
To
deviate
or
trend
to
the
leeward
of
the
point
to
which
the
head
of
the
ship
was
before
directed
;
to
fall
to
leeward
.
To fall on
.
(a)
To
meet
with
;
to
light
upon
;
as
,
we
have
fallen
on
evil
days
.
(b)
To
begin
suddenly
and
eagerly
.
“
Fall
on
,
and
try
the
appetite
to
eat.”
--
Dryden
.
(c)
To
begin
an
attack
;
to
assault
;
to
assail
.
“
Fall
on
,
fall
on
,
and
hear
him
not.”
--
Dryden
.
(d)
To
drop
on
;
to
descend
on
.
To fall out
.
(a)
To
quarrel
;
to
begin
to
contend
.
A
soul
exasperated
in
ills
falls out
With
everything
,
its
friend
,
itself
. --
Addison
.
(b)
To
happen
;
to
befall
;
to
chance
.
“There
fell
out
a
bloody
quarrel
betwixt
the
frogs
and
the
mice.”
--
L'Estrange
.
(c)
Mil.
To
leave
the
ranks
,
as
a
soldier
.
To fall over
.
(a)
To
revolt
;
to
desert
from
one
side
to
another
.
(b)
To
fall
beyond
. --
Shak
.
To fall short
,
to
be
deficient
;
as
,
the
corn
falls
short
;
they
all
fall
short
in
duty
.
To fall through
,
to
come
to
nothing
;
to
fail
;
as
,
the
engageent
has
fallen
through
.
To fall to
,
to
begin
.
“
Fall
to
,
with
eager
joy
,
on
homely
food.”
--
Dryden
.
To fall under
.
(a)
To
come
under
,
or
within
the
limits
of
;
to
be
subjected
to
;
as
,
they
fell
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
emperor
.
(b)
To
come
under
;
to
become
the
subject
of
;
as
,
this
point
did
not
fall under
the
cognizance
or
deliberations
of
the
court
;
these
things
do
not
fall under
human
sight
or
observation
.
(c)
To
come
within
;
to
be
ranged
or
reckoned
with
;
to
be
subordinate
to
in
the
way
of
classification
;
as
,
these
substances
fall under
a
different
class
or
order
.
To fall upon
.
(a)
To
attack
. [
See
To fall on
.]
(b)
To
attempt
;
to
have
recourse
to
.
“I
do
not
intend
to
fall
upon
nice
disquisitions.”
--
Holder
.
(c)
To
rush
against
.
Note:
☞
Fall
primarily
denotes
descending
motion
,
either
in
a
perpendicular
or
inclined
direction
,
and
,
in
most
of
its
applications
,
implies
,
literally
or
figuratively
,
velocity
,
haste
,
suddenness
,
or
violence
.
Its
use
is
so
various
,
and
so
mush
diversified
by
modifying
words
,
that
it
is
not
easy
to
enumerate
its
senses
in
all
its
applications
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Fall
v. t.
1.
To
let
fall
;
to
drop
. [
Obs
.]
For
every
tear
he
falls
,
a
Trojan
bleeds
.
--
Shak
.
2.
To
sink
;
to
depress
;
as
,
to
fall
the
voice
. [
Obs
.]
3.
To
diminish
;
to
lessen
or
lower
. [
Obs
.]
Upon
lessening
interest
to
four
per
cent
,
you
fall
the
price
of
your
native
commodities
.
--
Locke
.
4.
To
bring
forth
;
as
,
to
fall
lambs
. [
R
.]
5.
To
fell
;
to
cut
down
;
as
,
to
fall
a
tree
. [
Prov
.
Eng
. &
Local
, U.S.]
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Fall
,
n.
1.
The
act
of
falling
;
a
dropping
or
descending
be
the
force
of
gravity
;
descent
;
as
,
a
fall
from
a
horse
,
or
from
the
yard
of
ship
.
2.
The
act
of
dropping
or
tumbling
from
an
erect
posture
;
as
,
he
was
walking
on
ice
,
and
had
a
fall
.
3.
Death
;
destruction
;
overthrow
;
ruin
.
They
thy
fall
conspire
.
--
Denham
.
Pride
goeth
before
destruction
,
and
a
haughty
spirit
before
a
fall
.
--
Prov
.
xvi
. 18.
4.
Downfall
;
degradation
;
loss
of
greatness
or
office
;
termination
of
greatness
,
power
,
or
dominion
;
ruin
;
overthrow
;
as
,
the
fall
of
the
Roman
empire
.
Beholds
thee
glorious
only
in
thy
fall
.
--
Pope
.
5.
The
surrender
of
a
besieged
fortress
or
town
;
as
,
the
fall
of
Sebastopol
.
6.
Diminution
or
decrease
in
price
or
value
;
depreciation
;
as
,
the
fall
of
prices
;
the
fall
of
rents
.
7.
A
sinking
of
tone
;
cadence
;
as
,
the
fall
of
the
voice
at
the
close
of
a
sentence
.
8.
Declivity
;
the
descent
of
land
or
a
hill
;
a
slope
.
9.
Descent
of
water
;
a
cascade
;
a
cataract
;
a
rush
of
water
down
a
precipice
or
steep
; --
usually
in
the
plural
,
sometimes
in
the
singular
;
as
,
the
falls
of
Niagara
.
10.
The
discharge
of
a
river
or
current
of
water
into
the
ocean
,
or
into
a
lake
or
pond
;
as
,
the
fall
of
the
Po
into
the
Gulf
of
Venice
.
11.
Extent
of
descent
;
the
distance
which
anything
falls
;
as
,
the
water
of
a
stream
has
a
fall
of
five
feet
.
12.
The
season
when
leaves
fall
from
trees
;
autumn
.
What
crowds
of
patients
the
town
doctor
kills
,
Or
how
,
last
fall
,
he
raised
the
weekly
bills
. --
Dryden
.
13.
That
which
falls
;
a
falling
;
as
,
a
fall
of
rain
;
a
heavy
fall
of
snow
.
14.
The
act
of
felling
or
cutting
down
.
“The
fall
of
timber.”
15.
Lapse
or
declension
from
innocence
or
goodness
.
Specifically
:
The
first
apostasy
;
the
act
of
our
first
parents
in
eating
the
forbidden
fruit
;
also
,
the
apostasy
of
the
rebellious
angels
.
16.
Formerly
,
a
kind
of
ruff
or
band
for
the
neck
;
a
falling
band
;
a
faule
.
17.
That
part
(
as
one
of
the
ropes
)
of
a
tackle
to
which
the
power
is
applied
in
hoisting
.
Fall herring
Zool.
,
a
herring
of
the
Atlantic
(
Clupea mediocris
); --
also
called
tailor herring
,
and
hickory shad
.
To try a fall
,
to
try
a
bout
at
wrestling
. --
Shak
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
fall
n
1:
the
season
when
the
leaves
fall
from
the
trees
; "
in
the
fall
of
1973" [
syn
:
autumn
]
2:
a
sudden
drop
from
an
upright
position
; "
he
had
a
nasty
spill
on
the
ice
" [
syn
:
spill
,
tumble
]
3:
the
lapse
of
mankind
into
sinfulness
because
of
the
sin
of
Adam
and
Eve
; "
women
have
been
blamed
ever
since
the
Fall
"
4:
a
downward
slope
or
bend
[
syn
:
descent
,
declivity
,
decline
,
declination
,
declension
,
downslope
] [
ant
:
ascent
]
5:
a
lapse
into
sin
;
a
loss
of
innocence
or
of
chastity
; "
a
fall
from
virtue
"
6:
a
sudden
decline
in
strength
or
number
or
importance
; "
the
fall
of
the
House
of
Hapsburg
" [
syn
:
downfall
] [
ant
:
rise
]
7:
a
movement
downward
; "
the
rise
and
fall
of
the
tides
" [
ant
:
rise
]
8:
the
act
of
surrendering
(
under
agreed
conditions
); "
they
were
protected
until
the
capitulation
of
the
fort
" [
syn
:
capitulation
,
surrender
]
9:
the
time
of
day
immediately
following
sunset
; "
he
loved
the
twilight
"; "
they
finished
before
the
fall
of
night
" [
syn
:
twilight
,
dusk
,
gloaming
,
nightfall
,
evenfall
,
crepuscule
,
crepuscle
]
10:
when
a
wrestler's
shoulders
are
forced
to
the
mat
[
syn
:
pin
]
11:
a
free
and
rapid
descent
by
the
force
of
gravity
; "
it
was
a
miracle
that
he
survived
the
drop
from
that
height
" [
syn
:
drop
]
12:
a
sudden
sharp
decrease
in
some
quantity
; "
a
drop
of
57
points
on
the
Dow
Jones
index
"; "
there
was
a
drop
in
pressure
in
the
pulmonary
artery
"; "
a
dip
in
prices
";
"
when
that
became
known
the
price
of
their
stock
went
into
free
fall
" [
syn
:
drop
,
dip
,
free fall
]
v
1:
descend
in
free
fall
under
the
influence
of
gravity
; "
The
branch
fell
from
the
tree
"; "
The
unfortunate
hiker
fell
into
a
crevasse
"
2:
move
downward
and
lower
,
but
not
necessarily
all
the
way
;
"
The
temperature
is
going
down
"; "
The
barometer
is
falling
"; "
The
curtain
fell
on
the
diva
"; "
Her
hand
went
up
and
then
fell
again
" [
syn
:
descend
,
go down
,
come
down
] [
ant
:
rise
,
ascend
]
3:
pass
suddenly
and
passively
into
a
state
of
body
or
mind
;
"
fall
into
a
trap
"; "
She
fell
ill
"; "
They
fell
out
of
favor
"; "
Fall
in
love
"; "
fall
asleep
"; "
fall
prey
to
an
imposter
"; "
fall
into
a
strange
way
of
thinking
"; "
she
fell
to
pieces
after
she
lost
her
work
"
4:
come
under
,
be
classified
or
included
; "
fall
into
a
category
"; "
This
comes
under
a
new
heading
" [
syn
:
come
]
5:
fall
from
clouds
; "
rain
,
snow
and
sleet
were
falling
";
"
Vesuvius
precipitated
its
fiery
,
destructive
rage
on
Herculaneum
" [
syn
:
precipitate
,
come down
]
6:
suffer
defeat
,
failure
,
or
ruin
; "
We
must
stand
or
fall
";
"
fall
by
the
wayside
"
7:
decrease
in
size
,
extent
,
or
range
; "
The
amount
of
homework
decreased
towards
the
end
of
the
semester
"; "
The
cabin
pressure
fell
dramatically
"; "
her
weight
fall
to
under
a
hundred
pounds
"; "
his
voice
fell
to
a
whisper
" [
syn
:
decrease
,
diminish
,
lessen
] [
ant
:
increase
]
8:
die
,
as
in
battle
or
in
a
hunt
; "
Many
soldiers
fell
at
Verdun
"; "
Several
deer
have
fallen
to
the
same
gun
"; "
The
shooting
victim
fell
dead
"
9:
touch
or
seem
as
if
touching
visually
or
audibly
; "
Light
fell
on
her
face
"; "
The
sun
shone
on
the
fields
"; "
The
light
struck
the
golden
necklace
"; "
A
strange
sound
struck
my
ears
" [
syn
:
shine
,
strike
]
10:
be
captured
; "
The
cities
fell
to
the
enemy
"
11:
occur
at
a
specified
time
or
place
; "
Christmas
falls
on
a
Monday
this
year
"; "
The
accent
falls
on
the
first
syllable
"
12:
yield
to
temptation
or
sin
; "
Adam
and
Eve
fell
"
13:
lose
office
or
power
; "
The
government
fell
overnight
"; "
The
Qing
Dynasty
fell
with
Sun
Yat-sen
"
14:
to
be
given
by
assignment
or
distribution
; "
The
most
difficult
task
fell
on
the
youngest
member
of
the
team
";
"
The
onus
fell
on
us
"; "
The
pressure
to
succeed
fell
on
the
yougest
student
"
15:
move
in
a
specified
direction
; "
The
line
of
men
fall
forward
"
16:
be
due
; "
payments
fall
on
the
1st
of
the
month
"
17:
lose
one's
chastity
; "
a
fallen
woman
"
18:
to
be
given
by
right
or
inheritance
; "
The
estate
fell
to
the
oldest
daughter
"
19:
come
into
the
possession
of
; "
The
house
accrued
to
the
oldest
son
" [
syn
:
accrue
]
20:
fall
to
somebody
by
assignment
or
lot
; "
The
task
fell
to
me
"; "
It
fell
to
me
to
notify
the
parents
of
the
victims
"
[
syn
:
light
]
21:
be
inherited
by
; "
The
estate
fell
to
my
sister
"; "
The
land
returned
to
the
family
"; "
The
estate
devolved
to
an
heir
that
everybody
had
assumed
to
be
dead
" [
syn
:
return
,
pass
,
devolve
]
22:
slope
downward
; "
The
hills
around
here
fall
towards
the
ocean
"
23:
lose
an
upright
position
suddenly
; "
The
vase
fell
over
and
the
water
spilled
onto
the
table
"; "
Her
hair
fell
across
her
forehead
" [
syn
:
fall down
]
24:
drop
oneself
to
a
lower
or
less
erect
position
; "
She
fell
back
in
her
chair
"; "
He
fell
to
his
knees
"
25:
fall
or
flow
in
a
certain
way
; "
This
dress
hangs
well
"; "
Her
long
black
hair
flowed
down
her
back
" [
syn
:
hang
,
flow
]
26:
assume
a
disappointed
or
sad
expression
; "
Her
face
fell
when
she
heard
that
she
would
be
laid
off
"; "
his
crest
fell
"
27:
be
cast
down
; "
his
eyes
fell
"
28:
come
out
;
issue
; "
silly
phrases
fell
from
her
mouth
"
29:
be
born
,
used
chiefly
of
lambs
; "
The
lambs
fell
in
the
afternoon
"
30:
begin
vigorously
; "
The
prisoners
fell
to
work
right
away
"
31:
go
as
if
by
falling
; "
Grief
fell
from
our
hearts
"
32:
come
as
if
by
falling
; "
Night
fell
"; "
Silence
fell
" [
syn
:
descend
,
settle
]
[
also
:
fell
,
fallen
]
DICT.TW
About DICT.TW
•
Contact Webmaster
•
Index
•
Links