Englisch » Polnisch

I . fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l, Am fɑ:l] VERB intr

2. fall (drop down):

fall
to fall to [or on] one's knees

3. fall (decrease, drop):

fall
to fall to a whisper

4. fall (lose power):

fall
fall city, town
to fall from power

5. fall liter (die):

to fall in battle

7. fall (belong):

fall

8. fall (hang down, slope):

fall

9. fall (become):

to fall asleep
to fall ill [or sick]
chorować [perf za-]
to fall silent
milknąć [perf za-]
to fall vacant

II . fall [fɔ:l, Am fɑ:l] SUBST

1. fall (falling down):

fall
upadek m
fall of curtain
to have a fall

2. fall (snow):

fall
opad m

3. fall (movement):

fall of earth, rock

4. fall (decrease):

fall
spadek m

5. fall (overthrow):

fall
fall of Berlin Wall
upadek m
fall of city, town

6. fall AM (autumn):

fall

7. fall:

8. fall kein Pl REL:

the Fall [of Man]

III . fall [fɔ:l, Am fɑ:l] ADJ AM (autumnal)

fall

fall about VERB intr Brit ugs

fall away VERB intr

1. fall away (become detached):

fall away

2. fall away (slope downward):

fall away

3. fall away (fade):

fall away

fall back VERB intr

1. fall back (move backwards):

fall back

2. fall back (retreat):

fall back

I . fall behind VERB intr

1. fall behind (become slower):

fall behind

2. fall behind (in competition):

fall behind

3. fall behind (not do on time):

II . fall behind VERB trans

1. fall behind (become slower):

to fall behind sb

2. fall behind (achieve less):

to fall behind sb/sth

3. fall behind (not keep):

I . fall down VERB intr

1. fall down (triple):

fall down

2. fall down (collapse):

fall down
fall down tree

3. fall down (be unsatisfactory):

fall down

fall for VERB trans

1. fall for (be attracted to):

to fall for [sb]

2. fall for (be deceived by):

to fall for sth

fall in VERB intr

1. fall in roof, ceiling:

fall in

2. fall in people:

fall in

fall into VERB trans

1. fall into (fall):

to fall into sth

2. fall into (contain):

to fall into two parts

fall off VERB intr

1. fall off (become detached):

fall off

2. fall off (decrease):

fall off

fall on VERB trans

1. fall on (be borne by):

to fall on sb

2. fall on (seize greedily):

to fall on sb/sth

Einsprachige Beispiele (nicht von der PONS Redaktion geprüft)

Englisch
Three miles below the fall the chasm is 1,050 feet deep.
en.wikipedia.org
Things fall apart when she becomes too uncomfortable during the date.
en.wikipedia.org
After both team members made it across the esplanade without letting the flag fall, they received their next clue.
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
Complaints about politicians fraternizing with extremists (see first observation) fall flat when the extremists are clearly welcome in the larger community.
www.straight.com
And things go really bad, their lives kind of fall apart.
en.wikipedia.org
Architects tell us it would fall down if we interfered with it too much.
en.wikipedia.org
It also closes midweek and some weekends during the late fall, winter, and early spring.
en.wikipedia.org
The supply-demand balance then reverses; supply outpaces demand (sellers predominate), causing prices to fall.
en.wikipedia.org
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

Möchtest du ein Wort, eine Phrase oder eine Übersetzung hinzufügen?

Sende uns gern einen neuen Eintrag.

Seite auf Deutsch | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Português | Русский | Slovenščina