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The phrase "fall off balance" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe a physical movement or action where someone loses their balance and falls. It can also be used figuratively to describe a situation where someone feels mentally or emotionally unsteady or unstable. Example sentence 1 (physical): She tried to stand on one foot, but ended up falling off balance and tumbling to the ground. Example sentence 2 (figurative): After receiving the bad news, he felt his emotions begin to fall off balance and struggled to keep himself composed.
Exact(2)
As they fall off balance or whirl their bodies, their garments leave behind powdery clouds.
Do not fall off balance board.
Similar(58)
Expect that your opponent will snap his head back and fall off-balance.
Then, in her early adulthood, Kim life fell off-balance after her father and uncle passed away and after losing her job.
I just did four pirouettes while falling off balance.
Mr. Cornejo, bringing exceptional spring to his jumps, seemed to relish its slow falls off balance and upper-body complexities, too.
But Gilg, trying a "helicopter" spin in which she turns 360 degrees in the air on the first of two jumps, fell off balance and nearly stopped.
When I first saw Mr. Alston's work in London in 1978, he was still working independently of music, in the Cunningham manner, though, even then, his use of falling off balance was quite unlike Cunningham's.
"I fell off balance," Kershaw said.
If you're on a horse and you lose balance, you fall off.
You may hit a pole or lose your balance and fall off.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com