To fall through

To fall through
Through Through, adv. 1. From one end or side to the other; as, to pierce a thing through. [1913 Webster]

2. From beginning to end; as, to read a letter through. [1913 Webster]

3. To the end; to a conclusion; to the ultimate purpose; as, to carry a project through. [1913 Webster]

Note: Through was formerly used to form compound adjectives where we now use thorough; as, through-bred; through-lighted; through-placed, etc. [1913 Webster]

{To drop through}, to fall through; to come to naught; to fail.

{To fall through}. See under {Fall}, v. i. [1913 Webster]


The Collaborative International Dictionary of English. 2000.

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  • fall through/between the cracks — (also slip through/between the cracks) : to fail to be noticed or included with others Parents are concerned that children who have trouble in school will fall through the cracks in the school system. [=will not be given the help they need; will… …   Useful english dictionary

  • fall through — {v.}, {informal} To fail; be ruined; not happen or be done. * /Jim s plans to go to college fell through at the last moment./ * /Mr. Jones deal to sell his house fell through./ Contrast: COME OFF …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • fall through — {v.}, {informal} To fail; be ruined; not happen or be done. * /Jim s plans to go to college fell through at the last moment./ * /Mr. Jones deal to sell his house fell through./ Contrast: COME OFF …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • fall through — ► fall through fail. Main Entry: ↑fall …   English terms dictionary

  • fall through the net — see ↑net, 1 • • • Main Entry: ↑fall …   Useful english dictionary

  • fall through — verb fail utterly; collapse The project foundered • Syn: ↑fall flat, ↑founder, ↑flop • Derivationally related forms: ↑flop (for: ↑flop) …   Useful english dictionary

  • fall through — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms fall through : present tense I/you/we/they fall through he/she/it falls through present participle falling through past tense fell through past participle fallen through if something such as a deal, plan, or …   English dictionary

  • fall through the cracks — slip/fall/through the cracks phrase to not be dealt with by a system that is designed to help you or to stop you doing something Too many neglected children are slipping through the cracks. Thesaurus: to not make progresssynonym Main entry: crack …   Useful english dictionary

  • fall through — UK US fall through Phrasal Verb with fall({{}}/fɔːl/ verb (fell, fallen) ► [I] if something that has been planned or agreed falls through, it does not happen: »The deal fell through when someone made our client a better offer …   Financial and business terms

  • fall-through — noun In certain programming constructs, the situation where execution passes to the next condition in a list unless explicitly redirected. It is a good idea to comment the (rare) cases in which a fall through is intentional so that an uncommented …   Wiktionary

  • fall through — phr verb Fall through is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑arrangement, ↑deal, ↑plan, ↑sale …   Collocations dictionary

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