It a dodgy person was trying to sell you something in a pub (public house) in Britain, and you asked him where it came from. He is likely to say it 'came off the back of a lorry!' In other words, it was stolen!
Fell is the past tense form of fall.Watch out you don't fall!Jack fell off the wharf into the water.The past participle form is fallen - fall fell fallen.Quick Jack has fallen off the wharf!
Fell is the past tense for fall. Example: I always fall off my bike. Yesterday I fell off my bike and hurt my leg.
Fell is the past tense for fall. The past particile is fallen. Example: I always fall of my bike. Yesterday I fell off my bike and hurt my leg. I have fallen off my bike many times now.
"Off" is an adverb. But it can be considered a preposition in some cases.HoweverIn a case like "She fell off the bed", the preposition ofis understood, completing the actual prepositional phrase "(of) the bed". "Off" remains purely an adverb modifying the verb "fell", telling where she fell.
I hurt myself when I fell off the bike.
It fell off the back of a wagon
The Oprah Winfrey Show - 1986 Why Kirstie Alley Fell Off the Wagon was released on: USA: 30 April 2009
It means to be sober. If you fall off the wagon you have begun drinking again/relapsed.
Bills siblings were making alot of racket so when Bill fell off of the old wagon the sibilings did not notice,nor the parents.
On the wagon means you are giving up alcohol. You are not going to drink anything alcoholic. If you fall off the wagon, you've slipped up and had a drink.
If you mean, can they ban you or delete your account, then definitely yes.
He fell off a wagon trying to catch a sack of grain that was slipping during a journey and a wagon wheel rolled over him, breaking his neck.
because he fell of a horse Don't you mean 'fell OFF a horse'. Which he didn't anyway.
it could mean that he doesn't fell the same way and is trying to put you off
You have this wrongWhen you stop drinking alcohol you are said to be ON the wagon.Thus if you fall OFF the wagon it is taken to mean that you have started to drink alcohol again having one stopped.The WAGON in the expression relates to the water wagon, which was a horse-drawn water car once used to spray dirt roads to keep down the dust. (So if you were on the wagon you must be drinking WATER).
a candle holder that falls off a wall
What does it mean when pictures fall off the wall