fallen

verb
/ˈfɔːlən/UK/ˈfaːlən//ˈfɔlən/US

Etymology

Morphologically fall + -en.

  1. inherited from *fallą
  2. inherited from fealle — “trap, snare
  3. inherited from feall
  4. inherited from fal
  5. inherited from *h₃elh₁- — “to collapse, fall; to destroy
  6. inherited from *fallaną — “to fall
  7. inherited from *fallan — “to fall
  8. inherited from feallan — “to fall, fail, decay, die, attack
  9. inherited from fallen
  10. suffixed as fallen — “fall + en

Definitions

  1. past participle of fall

  2. Having dropped by the force of gravity.

    • fallen raindrops
  3. Killed, especially in battle.

    • a ceremony to honor fallen soldiers
    • the disposal of fallen livestock
    • We will face the problems of peace with the same courage that we have faced and mastered the problems of war. In the memory of those that have made the supreme sacrifice, in the memory of our fallen president, we shall not fail.
  4. + 6 more definitions
    1. Having lost one's chastity.

      • a fallen woman
      • Madam Julia was the town's ranking prostitute; virtuous female society demanded that they not suffer the unbearable pain of looking at, and being in company with, a fallen woman— one of the happiest, fallenest women in history, by the way.
    2. Having collapsed.

      • a fallen building
    3. Having lost prestige, (Christian) grace, etc.

      • That fallenest of our fallen race has left town — said to be near Fontainebleau by some, in Italy by others. More consequent with himself than usual, he is fulfilling, in the only possible way left open to him, his promise […]
    4. The dead.

    5. Casualties of battle or war.

    6. One who has fallen, as from grace.

      • In the Augustinian period, however, sin was held to be a death-inflicting agent, implying that the fallen was dead, and had to be restored to life.

The neighborhood

  • antonymarisenhaving lost prestige, (Christian) grace

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for fallen. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA