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  2. Dictionary
    fell
    [fel]
    verb
    fell (verb)
    1. past of fall
    fell
    [fel]
    verb
    fell (verb) · fells (third person present) · felled (past tense) · felled (past participle) · felling (present participle) · flat-fell (verb) · flat-fells (third person present) · flat-felled (past tense) · flat-felled (past participle) · flat-felling (present participle)
    1. (be felled)
      cut down (a tree):
      "33 million trees are felled each day"
    2. stitch down (the edge of a seam) to lie flat:
      "a flat-felled seam"
    noun
    fell (noun) · fells (plural noun)
    1. an amount of timber cut.
    Origin
    Old English fellan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vellen and German fällen, also to fall.
    fell
    [fel]
    noun
    fell (noun) · fells (plural noun)
    1. a hill or stretch of high moorland, especially in northern England:
      "Cross Fell"
    Origin
    Middle English: from Old Norse fjall, fell ‘hill’; probably related to German Fels ‘rock’.
    fell
    [fel]
    adjective
    literary
    fell (adjective)
    1. of terrible evil or ferocity; deadly:
      "sorcerers use spells to achieve their fell ends"
    Origin
    Middle English: from Old French fel, nominative of felon ‘wicked (person)’ (see felon).
    fell
    [fel]
    noun
    archaic
    fell (noun) · fells (plural noun)
    1. an animal's hide or skin with its hair.
    Origin
    Old English fel, fell, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vel and German Fell, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin pellis and Greek pella ‘skin’.
    fall
    [fôl]
    verb
    fell (past tense)
    1. move downward, typically rapidly and freely without control, from a higher to a lower level:
      "five inches of snow fell through the night" · "bombs could be seen falling from the planes"
      Opposite:
    2. (of a person) lose one's balance and collapse:
      "he stumbled, tripped, and fell"
      Similar:
      topple over
      tumble over
      keel over
      go head over heels
      go end over end
      fall headlong
      go headlong
      fall in a heap
      take a spill
      pitch forward
      trip over
      cowp
      go for six
      measure one's length
      Opposite:
    3. decrease in number, amount, intensity, or quality:
      "imports fell by 12 percent" · "we're worried that standards are falling" · "temperatures are going to fall to around four degrees"
      Similar:
      grow less
      decrease in value
      lose value
      decline in price
      hit the floor
      go through the floor
      take a nosedive
      take a header
      go into a tailspin
      Opposite:
      • (of a measuring instrument) show a lower reading:
        "the barometer had fallen a further ten points"
    4. be captured or defeated:
      "the besieged city fell after three months" · "their mountain strongholds fell to enemy attack"
      Similar:
      be overthrown by
      be taken by
      be defeated by
      be conquered by
      be overcome by
      be overwhelmed by
      lose one's position to
      pass into the hands of
      Opposite:
    5. pass into a specified state, situation, or position:
      "she fell pregnant"
      Opposite:
      stay awake
    Origin
    Old English fallan, feallan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vallen and German fallen; the noun is partly from the verb, partly from Old Norse fall ‘downfall, sin’.
    Translate fell to
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