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tumble down

B1 neutral inseparable intransitive
In simple words

To fall down in a messy, uncontrolled way — like a wall crumbling or a person rolling down a hill.

Literal meaning: To fall while turning over and over, rolling downward.

Meanings

1 B1 neutral

To fall or collapse in a rolling, uncontrolled way, especially from a height.

"The loose rocks tumbled down the hillside after the heavy rain."

"Humpty Dumpty had a great fall — all the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't put Humpty together again."

Grammar: inseparable
2 B1 neutral

Of a structure: to collapse or fall into ruin.

"The old barn finally tumbled down after years of neglect."

Grammar: inseparable
3 B2 idiomatic neutral

(figurative) Of a system, institution, or belief: to fail or collapse suddenly.

"When the evidence came out, the whole theory tumbled down."

"And the walls came tumbling down."

— Joshua and the Battle of Jericho (traditional spiritual / Book of Joshua)
Grammar: inseparable
Usage notes

Often used to describe the slow or sudden collapse of structures (walls, buildings, empires). Also used metaphorically to describe the collapse of systems, relationships, or institutions. The adjective 'tumbledown' (one word) describes a dilapidated structure.

Commonly used with

wall building house cliffs dominoes empire

Forms

Base
tumble down
I/you/we/they
3rd person
tumbles down
he/she/it
Past simple
tumbled down
yesterday
Past participle
tumbled down
have + pp
-ing form
tumbling down
continuous

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