Someone may find themselves falling out of a tree, a car, a plane, through a dorr, through a window, even building.
stub toe hit thumb with hammer fall down spill something bump my elbow
No. I think this construction (which is bad English) comes from the other form "Might you explain to me" which is also incorrect because might is either asking permission (may I) or asking if something is possible or likely (it might fall/it can fall). "You might have told me" (could have) is another idiomatic form when it suggests something undone rather than possibly done but not recalled.The possibility verb can/could is also not ideal for "Could you explain this?" because it means "is it possible for you." So "would you (please) explain (this) to me" is probably the best choice.
No, "fall" is not an onomatopoeia word. Onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the sound it represents, like "buzz" or "splash." "Fall" describes a season or the action of something descending.
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.
it is exclamatory :D
Some things that a person might fall out of include: bed, tree, chair, love, plane, car, and swing
yes you can, you can fall in love with anyones personality but it might not be true and they might be lying to you
They might be paralysed because a branch of nerves get damage which caused the person paralyed
this is my answer so it might be right or wrong: A PERSON CAN FALL WHENEVER THEY WANT TO FALL THEY CAN BE SUPER CLUMSY LIKE ME OR THEY CAN JUST TRIP OVER DIFFERENT THINGS
The first person to watch something fall. OR The first person to live.
A persons tooth may fall out if you r knocked in the head or have wip-lash
The ladder could fall on you. The person on the ladder could fall on you. You could knock the person on the ladder off it. The person on the ladder could drop something on you.
Might mean that person is watching over you.
some states will allow you to but if you get in a accident or get pulled over for something it will fall on the person you are driving with and you might get a ticket.
apple leaf nut branch pinecone cocunut
Yes, you can say a person "sustained a fall," but it may not be the most common phrasing. Typically, one might say a person "fell" or "suffered a fall." The term "sustained" is more often used in contexts like injuries or damage, such as "sustained injuries from the fall."
The nets are in place to catch an acrobat should he fall. Without the nets the person might get injured or killed from the fall.