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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fell off from" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is often used to describe something that was previously attached or connected to something else, but has now become detached or separated. Example: "The loose button on my shirt finally fell off from the fabric after months of wear and tear."
Exact(13)
On NBC, "Revelations" fell off from its premiere last week.
But the rest of NBC's lineup fell off from there.
I'd only ridden it twice when a bolt fell off from underneath the saddle and rolled down a drain.
As usual, "Rock Star: INXS" fell off from those lead-in numbers, but it did win the 10 p.m. hour in the 18-to-49 18-to-49 18-to-49tdrew age's "Boston Legroup(6.28 million versus 5.06 million).
And a new CBS entry, "The Amazing Race," while it fell off from its opening night Sept. 5, still had the biggest audience among younger viewers of any show last Wednesday.
The nanoplate and nanosheets which fell off from the Bi2WO6 microspheres distributed evenly on the surface of the hydration products.
Similar(47)
Some critics saw a falling off from his writing of the eighties.
In South Carolina, many of those falling off from Clinton seemed to go to Edwards.
For every point Clinton falls off from that ten-point spread, 45,000 votes switch to Obama.
After becoming Poet Laureate his collections in the 1980s seem to fall off from his earlier heights.
After six months, no matter what the quality of shoe, the soles would fall off from corrosion.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com