Find the synonyms or antonyms of a word
List of synonyms from "fell in love with" to synonyms from "fell through"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms fell off, fell stroke, fell love with, fell through and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
- Fell in love with
- Fell in to
- Fell in with
- Fell into
- Fell knees
- Fell line
- Fell lot
- Fell love with
- Fell off
- Fell on
- Fell on knees
- Fell on one knees
- Fell on one's knees
- Fell on ones knees
- Fell one knees
- Fell one's knees
- Fell ones knees
- Fell out
- Fell over
- Fell short
- Fell short of
- Fell stroke
- Fell the lot
- Fell through
Definition of the day : « fell through »
- As in miscarry : verb fail to attain goal
- As in fail : verb be unsuccessful
- As in founder : verb go under, fail
- She'd planned it before she went away, but somehow it fell through.
- Extract from : « The Prisoner » by Alice Brown
- It fell through, however, and our bombardment was renewed the following day.
- Extract from : « Athelstane Ford » by Allen Upward
- I ought to have had it yesterday, but a deal I had on fell through.
- Extract from : « The Man Who Lost Himself » by H. De Vere Stacpoole
- He must have cut his arm pretty bad when he fell through that window!
- Extract from : « The Banner Boy Scouts Snowbound » by George A. Warren
- Well, your campaign against Ennerly and Jackson fell through, didn't it?
- Extract from : « A Far Country, Complete » by Winston Churchill
- They fell through the Heavens, numerous as the flakes of a shower of snow.
- Extract from : « Astronomy for Amateurs » by Camille Flammarion
- Time after time the dogs now fell through, and time after time the men went in.
- Extract from : « The South Pole, Volumes 1 and 2 » by Roald Amundsen
- At length they fell through the very brilliancy of their genius.
- Extract from : « The Law of Civilization and Decay » by Brooks Adams
- An art union of his works was talked about; but it fell through.
- Extract from : « The Life Of George Cruikshank, Vol. II. (of II) » by Blanchard Jerrold
- The matter dragged on to September 1615, and then fell through.
- Extract from : « A Chronicle History of the Life and Work of William Shakespeare » by Frederick Gard Fleay