fell out

listen to the pronunciation of fell out
English - English
Simple past of fall out
(Slang) went to sleep (Example: "After working the night shift, I fell out")
fell out of bed
came in earlier than usual, got up at daybreak
fell out of line
began to do things in rebellion, took authority into his own hands
fell out of the blue
fell down like thunder on a clear day, surprised the heck out of everyone
fall out
To cease to be on good terms (with someone)

Dave and I fell out after a long argument.

fall out
To come out of something by falling

I opened the cupboard and a can fell out on to my foot.

fall out
come to pass; "What is happening?"; "The meeting took place off without an incidence"; "Nothing occurred that seemed important"
fall out
come as a logical consequence; follow logically; "It follows that your assertion is false"; "the theorem falls out nicely"
fall out
leave (a barracks, for example) in order to take a place in a military formation, or leave a military formation; "the soldiers fell out
fall out
waste, residue; disperse, scatter; quarrel, disagree
fall out
come forth or out; "You stick the coins in, but they come out again"; "His hair and teeth fell out"
fall out
go rest
fall out
have a breach in relations; "We fell out over a trivial question"
fall out
Material that fails various tests within the component manufacturing process
fall out
If you fall out with someone, you have an argument and stop being friendly with them. You can also say that two people fall out. She fell out with her husband Mum and I used to fall out a lot. see also fallout
fall out
If something such as a person's hair or a tooth falls out, it comes out. Her hair started falling out as a result of radiation treatment
fall out
leave (a barracks, for example) in order to take a place in a military formation, or leave a military formation; "the soldiers fell out"
fall out
disagreement
fell out

    Turkish pronunciation

    fel aut

    Pronunciation

    /ˈfel ˈout/ /ˈfɛl ˈaʊt/

    Etymology

    [ 'fol ] (verb.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English feallan; akin to Old High German fallan to fall and perhaps to Lithuanian pulti.

    Common Collocations

    fell out of
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