| tumble | | |
| tumble | (n.) | an acrobatic feat of rolling or turning end over end. |
| fall, spill, tumble | (n.) | a sudden drop from an upright position.; "he had a nasty spill on the ice" |
| topple, tumble | (v.) | fall down, as if collapsing.; "The tower of the World Trade Center tumbled after the plane hit it" |
| tip, topple, tumble | (v.) | cause to topple or tumble by pushing. |
| tumble | (v.) | roll over and over, back and forth. |
| tumble, whirl, whirl around | (v.) | fly around.; "The clothes tumbled in the dryer"; "rising smoke whirled in the air" |
| break down, collapse, crumble, crumple, tumble | (v.) | fall apart.; "the building crumbled after the explosion"; "Negotiations broke down" |
| tumble | (v.) | throw together in a confused mass.; "They tumbled the teams with no apparent pattern" |
| catch on, cotton on, get it, get onto, get wise, latch on, tumble, twig | (v.) | understand, usually after some initial difficulty.; "She didn't know what her classmates were plotting but finally caught on" |
| tumble | (v.) | fall suddenly and sharply.; "Prices tumbled after the devaluation of the currency" |
| tumble | (v.) | put clothes in a tumbling barrel, where they are whirled about in hot air, usually with the purpose of drying.; "Wash in warm water and tumble dry" |
| tumble | (v.) | suffer a sudden downfall, overthrow, or defeat. |
| tumble | (v.) | do gymnastics, roll and turn skillfully. |
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