| fall |
The fastest form of mass movement, occurring when rock or sediment breaks off from a steep or vertical slope and descends at a rate of 9.8 meters per second. A fall can be extremely dangerous.
Ãâó: college.hmco.com/geology/resources/geologylink/glo...
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|---|---|
| fall |
an accidental drop
Ãâó: www.finr.com/glossary.html
|
| fallopian tube |
Tube that leads from the cavity of the uterus to the area of the ovary. Also called uterine tube.
Ãâó: www.pregnancy-info.net/newprgnancyarticle13-1.html
|
| fall |
A mass of roof rock or coal which has fallen in any part of a mine.
Ãâó: www.readinganthracite.com/glossary.htm
|
| fallopian tube |
Either of two long, slender ducts connecting a woman's uterus to her ovaries, where eggs are transported from the ovaries to the uterus and sperm may fertilize an egg.
Ãâó: www.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/factbk2/glossary.htm
|
| fall | yield to temptation or sin"Adam and Eve fell" |
|---|---|
| fall | lose one's chastity |
| fall | touch or seem as if touching visually or audibly |
| fall | die, as in battle or in a hunt |
| fall | be due |
| fall | come under, be classified or included |
| fall | fall from clouds |
| fall | the lapse of mankind into sinfulness because of the sin of Adam and Eve |
| fall | become separated into pieces or fragments |
| fall | break or fall apart into fragments |
| fall | go to pieces |
| fall | lose one's emotional or mental composure |
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