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Fall over   /fɔl ˈoʊvər/   Listen
Fall over

verb
1.
Fall forward and down.  Synonym: go over.



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"Fall over" Quotes from Famous Books



... Campo, for example, about three-quarters of an hour from Pisciadello, there is a moraine composed of large boulders, which interrupt the course of a river and compel the water to fall over them in cascades. They have in great part resisted its action since the retreat of the ancient glacier which formed the moraine. Behind the moraine is a lake-bed, now converted into a level meadow, which rests on ...
— Fragments of science, V. 1-2 • John Tyndall

... an amazed glance,—but she paid no heed to it, and binding her arm with her kerchief, let her long white sleeve fall over it. ...
— Temporal Power • Marie Corelli

... the most beautiful and showy of all the violets, and calls forth rapturous applause from all persons who visit the woods. It grows in little groups and clusters, and bears a close resemblance to the pansies of the gardens. Its two purple, velvety petals seem to fall over tiny ...
— Wake-Robin • John Burroughs

... against the gale; but they were quickly dispersed here and there, so that the seamen on board the Sea-gull, with which we have to do, when they looked out into the gloom around, could not discover a single sail near them. Dark seas, with white, foaming crests, rose up on every side, threatening to fall over on the deck of the little vessel, and send her to the bottom. Now she rose to the summit of one of them now she sunk down into the deep trough between them; tumbling and pitching as if the sport of their fury. The lightning flashed vividly; the wind howled in the rigging; ...
— The Ferryman of Brill - and other stories • William H. G. Kingston

... Ralph while he was speaking, and seemed to stagger in his saddle; then he let his sallet fall over his face, and, turning his horse about, rode swiftly, he and his two fellows, down the hill and away to the battle of the Burgers. None followed or cried after him; for now had a great longing and expectation fallen upon Ralph's folk, and they abode what ...
— The Well at the World's End • William Morris


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