You need to see a doctor to get a diagnosis. A disease can do this, ear infection can put your equilibrium out of sorts or some medications can make you unsteady on your feet. See your doctor immediately!
I think from wherever on earth you are accept the equator down is the direction toward somewhere warmer and up is toward colder regions. From the North and South Poles down is every direction you can go It is a very good question: Any direction is always relative to your frame of reference. On the Earth, down is normally towards the centre of the Earth - no matter where you are, England, US, Australia, Mexico or the South Pole. We look down at the floor and look up to the ceiling. However, if you were standing on your head, you could say that you are looking up at your feet whilst looking down at the floor, whilst someone standing next to you would say a) you look silly and b) you are wrong. Down is towards my feet, but both agree on the direction but not terminology. The frame of reference. If you were on Jupiter the same rules would apply, but if you were floating in space then there would be no real up nor down. Generally down is always going to be the direction of the greatest gravitational attraction or in which direction an object will fall in free fall. Hence you "fall down", not "fall up".
If you were to fall into a black hole, the extreme gravitational forces would stretch and compress your body in a process known as spaghettification, ultimately tearing you apart. As you move closer to the singularity at the center of the black hole, time dilation would cause you to experience time differently compared to someone observing from outside the black hole. Ultimately, you would be pulled into the singularity, where the laws of physics as we know them break down.
why doesthe temprature fall down towards the end of the fractional distillation
At 5km up the Satellite would still be in the earths atmosphere and would also be subject to gravity. Put simply it would just fall back down. Space starts at about 100km up or 62 miles. The moon also has 1/6ths of Earths gravity and at 5km up there would be little if any pull from the moon.
Does a cold front cause precipitation to fall for longer periods of time but less intensely
You would die cause you would be too clumsy and you would fall down a flight of stairs
because the bridge will fall any time and some times theres to much wait
depends on how high it is, it would have to be at least 6 or 7.0
yah
in my mind others are down cause is that,
You would fall against your will
A person may fall down due to being sick or having overworked.
stupify
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.
There are many things that would cause finger nails to fall off. You could have hit the nail on something for example.
cause when you walk up it is easy and it is hard to walk down cause you can fall
You can either law down and cry or fall down and moan because being kicked in the privates is always painful.