Our normal experience is that if we throw something into the air, it is going to fall down again, leading to the expression, what goes up must come down. However, it is also possible to put a satellite into orbit, which goes up and stays up, at least for a long time. But even artificial satellites don't really stay up forever; their orbits decay.
Frequency drops, assuming the velocity stays the same.
A road.
A staircase.
The object is likely a lamp or a fixed light source that remains stationary when turned off and on.
A top stays up due to its spinning motion creating gyroscopic stability, which helps it maintain its balance and resist falling over. The spinning motion creates angular momentum, providing stability similar to how a spinning bicycle wheel stays upright.
When supply increases and demand decreases, the price goes down. When supply goes up and demand stays the same, price also goes down. When demand goes up and supply either stays the same or decreases, then the price goes up
stairs
Stairs
1) What goes up, must come down. 2) What goes down, stays down. 3) What stays down is probably dead.
An elevator or lift.
It's a very direct relationship; weight is caused by gravity. weight = mass x gravity Therefor, if gravity goes up and mass stays constant weight, goes up. And the reverse is true if gravity goes down and mass stays constant, weight goes down.
goes up or goes down stays the same
That's generally written as "What goes around the world and stays in a corner?" The answer is a stamp.
The Power of One
Aria goes with noel Hannah goes with mike Spencer goes with Andrew Emily stays single and Melissa stays single too altho the bound between spencers family grows closer together
Stairs, you go up you go down but the stairs never move.
The alcohol stays in the blood, and you get drunker, and your BAC goes up.