Oznaczający (Angielski)

Koncepcje

jesień

upadek

spadać

padać

spadek

spadanie

upadać

bessa

spaść

kapitulacja

opad

opadać

paść

regres

opadanie

degenerować się

padnięcie

upadnięcie

polegnąć

przypadek

topić

wodospad

obniżka

odłączać

pogorszyć

przypaść

rozłączać

ubytek

upaść

wpadać

spadnięcie

Częstotliwość

A2
Wymawiane jako (IPA)
/fɔl/
Etymologia (Angielski)

In summary

Verb from Middle English fallen, from Old English feallan (“to fall, fail, decay, die, attack”), from Proto-West Germanic *fallan (“to fall”), from Proto-Germanic *fallaną (“to fall”). Cognate with West Frisian falle (“to fall”), Low German fallen (“to fall”), Dutch vallen (“to fall”), German fallen (“to fall”), Danish falde (“to fall”), Norwegian Bokmål falle (“to fall”), Norwegian Nynorsk falla (“to fall”), Icelandic falla (“to fall”), Lithuanian pùlti (“to attack, rush”). Noun from Middle English fal, fall, falle, from Old English feall, ġefeall (“a falling, fall”) and Old English fealle (“trap, snare”), from Proto-Germanic *fallą, *fallaz (“a fall, trap”). Cognate with Dutch val, German Fall (“fall”) and German Falle (“trap, snare”), Danish fald, Swedish fall, Icelandic fall. Sense of "autumn" is attested by the 1660s in England as a shortening of fall of the leaf (1540s), from the falling of leaves during this season. Along with autumn, it mostly replaced the older name harvest as that name began to be associated strictly with the act of harvesting. Compare spring, which began as a shortening of “spring of the leaf”.

Notes

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