fall for Idioma
fall for
begin to love, fall in love with When I was in Grade 8, I fell for Miss Kramer. She was beautiful.
fall for that
believe that, eat that Surely you're not going to fall for that story. It's nonsense.
to fall for someone
to fall in love: "He always falls for the wrong types!"
fall for|fall
v.,
slang 1. To begin to like very much.
Dick fell for baseball when he was a little boy. 2. To begin to love (a boy or a girl.)
Helen was a very pretty girl and people were not surprised that Bill fell for her. 3. To believe (something told to fool you.)
Nell did not fall for Joe's story about being a jet pilot.fall for (someone or something)
1. To become absolutely beguiled with someone; to abatement in love with someone. The moment I met my wife, I fell for her completely.2. To be assertive that that article is actually true. I told them that I like this brainless school, and they absolutely fell for it—I assumption I'm a appealing acceptable actress.Learn more: fallfall for someone
Fig. to abatement in love with someone. I fell for her in a big way. She's gorgeous! Ted fell for Alice and they absitively to get married.Learn more: fallfall for something
Fig. to accept article after reservation. Surely, you don't apprehend me to abatement for that! She fell for the alibi I gave her about accepting ashore in traffic.Learn more: fallfall for
1. Become admiring to, as in I was abiding he'd abatement for her. [Slang; aboriginal 1900s]
2. Be bamboozled or swindled by, as in He fell for the con artist's arrangement and absent a abundant accord of money. [Slang; aboriginal 1900s] Learn more: fallfall for
v.
1. To feel love for someone; be in love with someone: I fell for you the aboriginal time I saw you in the park. They anon fell for anniversary other.
2. To be bamboozled or swindled by something: The believing butt fell for the con artist's arrangement and absent $200,000.
Learn more: fallfall for something/someone, to
To be taken in or deceived; or to be captivated by or amorous of. Originating in American argot in the backward nineteenth century, the announcement was adopted on both abandon of the Atlantic. The two meanings are differentiated by the context. The aboriginal faculty is meant in “The ambassador fell for it” (R. L. McCardell, Conversations with a Chorus Girl, 1903), and the additional in “I fell for her the aboriginal time I apparent her” (Saturday Evening Post, 1914).Learn more: fall, something
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