descend
Verb
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Move downward and lower, but not necessarily all the way (synset 201974840)
"The temperature is going down"; "The barometer is falling"; "The curtain fell on the diva"; "Her hand went up and then fell again"is a type of: go, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphoricallysubtypes:
- prolapse - slip or fall out of place, as of body parts
- abseil, rappel, rope down - descend by means of a rappel
- dismount, get down, get off, light, unhorse - alight from (a horse)
- avalanche, roll down - gather into a huge mass and roll down a mountain, of snow
- dive, plunge, plunk - drop steeply
- go down, go under, set - disappear beyond the horizon
- correct, decline, slump - go down in value
- precipitate - fall vertically, sharply, or headlong
- sink, subside - descend into or as if into some soft substance or place
- crash - fall or come down violently
- flop - fall suddenly and abruptly
- topple, tumble - fall down, as if collapsing
- drop - to fall vertically
- plop - drop with the sound of something falling into water
- pitch - fall or plunge forward
- alight, climb down - come down
- go down, go under, settle, sink - go under
- pounce, swoop - move down on as if in an attack
- drip - fall in drops
- cascade, cascade down - rush down in big quantities, like a cascade
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Come from;
Be connected by a relationship of blood, for example (synset 202743062)"She was descended from an old Italian noble family"; "he comes from humble origins" -
Do something that one considers to be below one's dignity (synset 202597468)
same as: condescend, deign
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Come as if by falling (synset 200342819)
"Night fell"; "Silence fell"is a type of: come - come to pass; arrive, as in due courseverb group: fall - go as if by falling
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- Rhyme: Dillfrog, RhymeZone
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