The word you're looking for is "fell." It can mean to fall, as in something that has fallen, and it is also the past tense of "fall." Additionally, "fell" can refer to the act of cutting down a tree.
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.
you cut down the power lines so the tree cant fall on them
no , if you get luckey you might a Pokemon might fall out
Because it has no real roots!
yes
It can't unless the tree is old and fall down.
When a tree goes through the healthy process of losing it's leaves, it is entering dormancy. This means that the tree is resting; it's sap is slowing down, therefore the leaves are dying. This is a good time to transplant because there is not the uptake from the roots; the tree is not putting it's energy into growth. By transplanting in the fall, there is less interruption to the growth process. This also means that there is the entire winter for the tree to have adjusted to it's new home and will be ready to grow more quickly than if it were transplanted in spring.
kiochi means kiochi in Japanese in English it means tree fall
to get Ivan down from the tree: roll into the tree as best as you can and he will fall down. he runs faster than the other children though, so be careful
When a branch of a tree is shaken its fruits fall down. this is mainly due to inertia of rest. when the tree is shaken the tree is in motion, but the frits remain to be at rest. this is when they seperate from the tree and hence fall due to gravity.
The tree eventually shuts down chlorophyll (green) production in the fall
It will spin and then slowly drop off.