English

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Etymology

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Morphologicallyfall+‎-en.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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fallen

  1. pastparticipleoffall

Adjective

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fallen(not generallycomparable,comparativemorefallen,superlativemostfallenor(uncommon)fallenest)

  1. Having dropped by the force of gravity.
    fallenraindrops
  2. Killed, especially in battle.
    a ceremony to honorfallensoldiers
    the disposal offallenlivestock
    • 1945April 16,Harry S. Truman,10:41 from the start, inMP72-20 President Roosevelt’s Funeral and Procession; Truman – New President of U.S.[1],Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum,National Archives Identifier:595162:
      We will face the problems of peace with the same courage that we have faced and mastered the problems of war. In the memory of those that have made the supreme sacrifice, in the memory of ourfallenpresident, we shall not fail.
  3. Having lost one'schastity.
    afallenwoman
    • 1964,Katharine Hillyer,Mark Twain, Young Reporter in Virginia City: The Racy, Rollicking Adventures of a Great Author in the Gamiest, Richest, Mightiest Town in All the Frontier West!:
      Madam Julia was the town's ranking prostitute; virtuous female society demanded that they not suffer the unbearable pain of looking at, and being in company with, afallenwoman— one of the happiest,fallenestwomen in history, by the way.
    • 1991,Kelly Walsh,Nightshades and Orchids,→ISBN:
      "You make yourself out to be thefallenestoffallenwomen. "Tilting her head toward Sharon, Debbie grinned." Let's face it. There can't be winners without losers, and I'm a loser. But look at it this way. I make it possible for some other woman[]
  4. Having collapsed.
    afallenbuilding
  5. Having lostprestige,(Christian)grace,etc.
    • 1913,John Bigelow,Retrospections of an Active Life: 1867-1871,page397:
      Thatfallenestof ourfallenrace has left town — said to be near Fontainebleau by some, in Italy by others. More consequent with himself than usual, he is fulfilling, in the only possible way left open to him, his promise[]

Synonyms

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Antonyms

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  • (having lost prestige, (Christian) grace, etc.):arisen

Derived terms

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Translations

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Noun

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fallen(pluralfallen)

  1. (plural only)Thedead.
  2. (plural only)Casualtiesof battle or war.
  3. (countable,Christianity)One who has fallen, as from grace.
    • 1873,James Strong with John McClintock,Cyclopaedia of Biblical, theological, and ecclesiastical literature,volume 5:
      In the Augustinian period, however, sin was held to be a death-inflicting agent, implying that thefallenwas dead, and had to be restored to life.

Translations

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Catalan

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Verb

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fallen

  1. third-personpluralpresentindicativeoffallar

German

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Etymology

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FromMiddle High Germanvallen,fromOld High Germanfallan,fromProto-West Germanic*fallan,fromProto-Germanic*fallaną,fromProto-Indo-European*pōl-.Akin toBavarianfoin,Low Germanfallen,Dutchvallen,Englishfall,Danishfalde,Dutchfalla.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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fallen(class 7strong,third-person singular presentfällt,past tensefiel,past participlegefallen,auxiliarysein)

  1. (intransitive)tofall;todrop
    Der Regenfielwie aus Eimern.
    It rained cats and dogs. (literally: 'The rain fell as if out of buckets.')
    Siefielzu Boden.
    She fell to the floor.
  2. (intransitive,military)todie;tofallinbattle;todieinbattle;tobekilledin action
    • 1918,Elisabeth von Heyking,Die Orgelpfeifen,in: Zwei Erzählungen, Phillipp Reclam jun. Verlag, page 31:
      Bei einem Patrouillenritt, zu dem er sich freiwillig gemeldet,warder älteste der Enkelgefallen.Ruhte nun fern in Feindesland.
      On a patrolling ride, for which he had volunteered, the oldest of the grandchildren had died. Rested now far away in enemy country.
  3. (intransitive)tofall,tocollapse,to beoverthrown.
    Das Römische Reichfielauf Grund der Völkerwanderung.
    The Roman Empire was overthrown by the consequences of the Migration period.
  4. (intransitive)to become lower, todecrease,todecline
    Zur Zeit der Finanzkrisefielenviele Aktienkurse um zahlreiche Prozentpunkte.
    During the banking scandal many stock prices decreased by a large percentage.

Conjugation

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Synonyms

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Derived terms

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Verbs
Nouns


Adjectives


Phrases

Further reading

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  • fallen”inDigitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
  • fallen”in Uni Leipzig:Wortschatz-Lexikon
  • fallen”inDudenonline
  • fallen”inOpenThesaurus.de

Low German

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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FromMiddle Low Germanvallen,fromOld Saxonfallan,fromProto-West Germanic*fallan,fromProto-Germanic*fallaną.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key):/ˈfalːn̩/,/ˈfalːən/

Verb

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fallen(past singularfull,past participlefullen,auxiliary verbwesen)

  1. (ergative)tofall,tumble
    de Avendfalltthe evening falls
    in Slaapfallento fall asleep
  2. to happen
    dat is op düssen Dagfullenthat happened on that day

Conjugation

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Middle English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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FromOld Englishfeallan,fromProto-West Germanic*fallan,fromProto-Germanic*fallaną.Weak forms are due to the conflation of this verb withfellen(to fell)in some dialects.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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fallen

  1. tofall

Conjugation

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Descendants

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  • English:fall
  • Yola:vall,vale,vole

References

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Norwegian Bokmål

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Etymology

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From the verbfalle.

Adjective

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fallen(neuter singularfallent,definite singular and pluralfalne)

  1. fallen

Derived terms

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References

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Norwegian Nynorsk

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Etymology

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From the verbfalle.

Adjective

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fallen(neuter singularfalle,definite singular and pluralfalne)

  1. fallen

Derived terms

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References

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Spanish

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Verb

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fallen

  1. inflection offallar:
    1. third-personpluralpresentsubjunctive
    2. third-personpluralimperative
  2. third-personpluralpresentindicativeoffallir

Swedish

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Participle

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fallen

  1. pastparticipleoffalla

Adjective

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fallen

  1. fallen
    enfallenängela fallen angel
    fallnaäpplenfallen apples

Declension

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Inflection offallen
Indefinite Positive Comparative Superlative2
Common singular fallen
Neuter singular fallet
Plural fallna
Masculine plural3 fallne
Definite Positive Comparative Superlative
Masculine singular1 fallne
All fallna
1) Only used, optionally, to refer to things whose natural gender is masculine.
2) The indefinite superlative forms are only used in the predicative.
3) Dated or archaic

Noun

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fallen

  1. definitepluraloffall

Anagrams

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