No, the preposition 'on' is incorrect.
"You tripped over a box..." How did you trip? I tripped "by accident".
Yes, "tripped" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "trip," which means to stumble or fall due to catching one's foot on something.
The clumsy boy tripped over his own shoes and fell on his bottom--what a buffoon!
You might say Ben tripped over clumsily. There are lots of other sentences you could put it in.
"How are things over/in there?" is what it means in English.
là-bas means over there or down there
Yes his father tripped over and fell inside Mummy Undertaker and 9 months later the undertaker was born
His shoelace was not tied and he almost tripped over it. She broke her arm when she tripped and fell on the street.
"tripped" is a correct word... if you meant someone was walking along and they tripped over a rock.... correct past tense of "trip."
The verbs are "tripped" and "fell".
Yes, "tripped" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "trip," which means to stumble or fall due to catching one's foot on something.
It is a verb, the past tense of trip. It describes an action. "Mark tripped over the rug." Tripped is also an adjective. "Homeowners can reset a tripped breaker themselves."
You can use "tripped over" in a sentence by describing an action where someone stumbles due to an obstacle. For example: "I tripped over the curb while walking and nearly fell." This phrase conveys a moment of loss of balance caused by encountering something in the way.
It tripped over a log
In the proper QUEEN's English, it's 'he was RUN over by a car.'
He tripped over it
he tripped on the loose step outside the kitchen door
spray water over it