| AEFALD | • AEFALD adj. onefold, also AEFAULD, AFALD, AFAWLD. |
| BEFALL | • befall v. (Transitive) To fall upon; fall all over; overtake. • befall v. (Intransitive) To happen. • befall v. (Transitive) To happen to. |
| FALCES | • falces n. Plural of falx. • FALX n. (Latin) the sickle-shaped fold of the dura mater on the midline of the brain between the cerebral hemispheres. |
| FALCON | • falcon n. Any bird of the genus Falco, all of which are birds of prey. • falcon n. (Falconry) A female such bird, a male being a tiercel. • falcon n. (Historical) A light cannon used from the 15th to the 17th century; a falconet. |
| FALLAL | • fallal n. A piece of ribbon worn as a streamer. • fallal n. Any trifling ornament. • FALLAL n. a showy article of dress. |
| FALLEN | • fallen v. Past participle of fall. • fallen adj. Having dropped by the force of gravity. • fallen adj. (Literary) Killed in battle. |
| FALLER | • faller n. One who falls. • faller n. A fruit that falls from the tree, rather than being picked. • faller n. (Engineering) A part which acts by falling, such as a stamp in a fulling mill, or the device in a spinning… |
| FALLOW | • fallow n. (Agriculture, uncountable) Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year. • fallow n. (Agriculture, uncountable) Uncultivated land. • fallow n. The ploughing or tilling of land, without sowing it for a season. |
| FALSED | • falsed adj. (Obsolete) Feigned, fake. • falsed v. Simple past tense and past participle of false. • FALSE v. to deceive. |
| FALSER | • falser adj. Comparative form of false: more false. • falser n. (Obsolete) A deceiver. • FALSER n. (obsolete) a falsifier, a counterfeiter. |
| FALSES | • falses n. Plural of false. • falses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of false. • FALSE v. to deceive. |
| FALSIE | • falsie n. (Colloquial, chiefly in the plural) Padding worn inside a brassiere to make the breasts appear larger… • falsie n. (Colloquial, chiefly in the plural) A false eyelash, used as a cosmetic enhancement. • FALSIE n. a pad worn within a brassiere. |
| FALTER | • falter n. An unsteadiness. • falter v. To waver or be unsteady; to weaken or trail off. • falter v. (Transitive, intransitive) To stammer; to utter with hesitation, or in a weak and trembling manner. |
| FARFAL | • FARFAL n. (Yiddish) noodles in the form of small pellets or granules, also FARFEL. |
| INFALL | • infall n. The act or process of falling in. • infall n. An incursion; an inroad. • infall n. (Countable) The area where water, storm runoff, etc., enters a storm drain. |
| OFFALS | • offals n. Plural of offal. • OFFAL n. waste or rejected parts, esp. of a carcase. |
| ONFALL | • onfall n. A falling on or upon; an attack, onset, or assault. • onfall n. A fall of rain or snow. • onfall n. The fall of the evening. |
| RAFALE | • rafale n. (Military) A short, intense burst of artillery fire from a number of weapons fired with the intention… • RAFALE n. (French) a burst of artillery in quick rounds. |
| REFALL | • refall v. (Rare) To fall again. • REFALL v. to fall again. |