Help her up then identify the issue
In the sentence, "The tree fell down." there is one noun: treeThe word 'the' is an article designating a specific tree.The word 'fell' is the verb.The word 'down' is an adverb modifying the verb 'fell'.
An example is to fell a tree, meaning to chop it down.
In the sentence "A large tree fell down during the storm," "down" functions as an adverb, modifying the verb "fell." It indicates the direction of the falling action.
He saw that an apple fell from a tree and wondered why it fell down and why it didn't just stay in the air floating. [ It fell down because of the gravitational pull pulling it back towards the ground ] .
Another way to say "fell a tree" is to "cut down a tree." This phrase conveys the same action of removing a tree from its standing position. Alternatively, you could also use "harvest a tree" if referring to the process of cutting it down for timber or other uses.
You would use "fall" because "to fall" is the infinitive and you use the uninflected version. "Fell" is the past tense of "fall," but you are not using past tense here. "Fell" can also be a transitive verb meaning to cause (something else) to fall. If you chop down a tree, you fell the tree, but the tree falls.
The word you're looking for is "fell." It can mean to fall, as in something that has fallen, and it is also the past tense of "fall." Additionally, "fell" can refer to the act of cutting down a tree.
tell someone so they cam move it
It can be a technical term for timber cut in a season. It is a verb meaning to cut down a tree. But it is more usually the past tense of fall.
gravity
She was skiing and went down the slope and fell and hit a tree.
Juniper