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No, it is not correct. The correct phrasing would be "all the tins fell."
I hurt myself when I fell off the bike.
After a long day of hiking, I fell into a peaceful slumber under the stars.
The footballer injured his groin when he tripped and fell badly.
The appositive in the sentence "The book Jerome was carrying, a dictionary, fell into the mud", is dictionary which is describing the noun book.The appositive 'dictionary' renames the subject noun 'book'.
the answer is''the rain kiss your cheeks
They fell on each other and kissed, so yes I think they fell in love after that.
I fell backward. Is the correct sentence I belive.
fell offFell off is a phrasal verb. In this sentence the verb is past tense.
Sentence
Cherry blossoms fell in copious amounts on the breezy day. Copious is an adjective meaning abundant or plentiful.
(fell) i fell off my bike
He fell off the ladder and broke his arm.We will fell this tree.
Not every sentence has a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun, but not all sentences include this grammatical structure. Some sentences may contain other types of phrases or be structured differently.
When the cow fell into the gully, it took a team of firemen and heavy lifting gear to rescue it.
Your welcome. "Your" is a possessive meaning "belonging to you". The contraction for YOU ARE is spelled YOU'RE. A sentence starting with "YOUR" would require possession, e.g. "Your signature is required on this check" or "Your hat accidentally fell on the floor".
A sentence requires a subject and a verb, without those, it's not a sentence. "Into the water" is not a sentence; when you add a subject and a verb, "My keys fell into the water." you have a sentence. The subject is 'keys', the verb is 'fell'.