faller
English
    
    
Noun
    
faller (plural fallers)
- One who falls.
- 1920, The Green Book Magazine, volume 23, page 75:- I've said that you girls on this side were not very whole-hearted fallers-in-love.
 
- 2011, Dana Stabenow, Hunter's Moon:- Most trippers and fallers I know fall forward, but it could have happened. He could have gone out for a midnight walk, he could have wanted to commune with the moon from the middle of the log, he could have tripped and fallen backward […]
 
- 2016, Michael P. Burke, Forensic Pathology of Fractures and Mechanisms of Injury:- Significantly more cervical spine injuries were seen in fallers as opposed to jumpers.
 
 
- A fruit that falls from the tree, rather than being picked.
- 1867, The Penny Post, volume 17, page 17:- There were peas to be gathered and shelled, currants and gooseberries to be picked, and when the apple season came, she had to go round the orchard several times a-day to pick up the fallers.
 
 
- (engineering) A part which acts by falling, such as a stamp in a fulling mill, or the device in a spinning machine to arrest motion when a thread breaks.
Derived terms
    
- backfaller
- counterfaller
- off-faller
Catalan
    
    
Adjective
    
faller (feminine fallera, masculine plural fallers, feminine plural falleres)
- (relational) of the Falles
Further reading
    
- “faller” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
Norman
    
    Etymology
    
From Old French faloir, from an earlier *falleir, from Latin fallō, fallere, from Proto-Indo-European *gʰwel- (“to lie, deceive”).
Pronunciation
    
- Audio (Jersey) - (file) 
Norwegian Bokmål
    
    
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