That is the correct spelling for the word "falling" (dropping).
I was falling behind in my school work.
falling
falling in love
The word 'falling' is the present participle of of the verb to fall. The present participle of the verb is also an adjective, and a gerund, a word that functions as a noun. Examples: verb: The leaves are falling early this year. adjective: He caught the falling bowl before it hit the floor. noun: Falling for that sales pitch will cost you a lot more money.
dying
Enamored
jj
I cannot use the words never falling in a sentence. there a sentence
Rising and falling intonation refer to the changing pitch in a word. It is like singing the word, with a rising or falling note. In English, rising intonation occurs at the end of a question. So in "Is that yours?", the word "yours" is said with rising pitch. In "That one is yours." The same word is said with a falling or uniform pitch. Falling pitch can indicate the end of a sentence or paragraph. A sentence that would normally be heard as a simple statement, can become a question if a word has a rising intonation. For example, "The red one is yours?" could be said with rising intonation on the word "red" or on the word "yours", depending which word is being questioned.
som (in the falling tone)
to plummet