blackhole
Completely devoid of fuel, she collapsed in a shivering heap and was unable to mine any more diamonds.
Fell, tripped, ect. It depends on what it is talking about. For example: I collapsed on the ground. The synonyms for that would be fell. PLEASE FIX THIS IF THIS IS WRONG!! I don't believe it is.
The ancient tree sighed in resignation as its branches slowly collapsed under the weight of time and neglect.
(literally) Spurred on by his rider, the horse easily jumped the chasm as the bridge collapsed. The runner, spurred on by the cheering of the crowd, won the race in record time.
He died of old age, pretty much. He was an elderly man to begin with, and the stress and strain of defeating the Cybermen in 'The Tenth Planet' took its toll. He collapsed in the TARDIS and in a scene that no video footage remains for, he regenerates into the Second Doctor.
Yes, the Southern economy completely collapsed.
Completely devoid of fuel, she collapsed in a shivering heap and was unable to mine any more diamonds.
A black hole is what is left of an object that has completely collapsed under the force of gravity.
No. A black hole is an object that has completely collapsed under the force of gravity. Within a certain radius not even light can escape.
The synonym for collapsed is "fallen" or "crumbled."
An adjective modifies a noun. The adjective forms are collapsible and collapsed.The collapsible sofa becomes a bed.The collapsed barn would have to be rebuilt.
The building collapsed in the earthquake.
It depends. In the case of "A collapsed building." it is an adjective. It can however be used as the past tense version of "to collapse" as in "I collapsed" or "This building collapsed yesterday." in which case it is indeed a verb.
The adverb in the sentence "the castle ramparts frequently collapsed as they were old" is "frequently." It modifies the verb "collapsed" by indicating how often the ramparts collapsed.
No it wasn't seen before they collapsed, it was seen and photographed just after they collapsed.
No. The word collapsed is the past tense of the verb "to collapse" (as in "the building collapsed during an earthquake"), or it can be an adjective describing a structure that has already fallen down (as in "the explorers carefully made their way through the collapsed temple").So collapsed is not an adverb, but a verb or an adjective.
The European Union has not collapsed. It still exists.