Noun
freefall (uncountable)
- (physics) The state of being in a motion affected by no acceleration (force) other than that provided by gravity.
- (common usage) The state of falling with no interference from outside forces other than the air resistance (no open parachute, etc.)
- (by extension) The state of worsening out of control.
As civil war continues in Iraq, the U.S. president's approval ratings are in freefall.
2010, Mick Herron, Slow Horses, page 63:House prices were in freefall, if you owned one.
2020 March 25, Rail, front cover:Passenger numbers in freefall as UK battles COVID-19
2021 February 6, Rachel Monroe, “Ultra-fast Fashion Is Eating the World”, in The Atlantic:Even with the economy in free fall, demand for cheap, cute clothes persisted.
Derived terms
Derived terms
- accelerated free fall
- acceleration of free fall
- free-fall style
- free-fall time
- in freefall
- progressive free fall
- universality of free fall
Translations
being affected only by gravity
- Catalan: caiguda lliure f
- Czech: volný pád m
- Finnish: vapaa pudotus
- French: chute libre (fr) f
- Hindi: मुक्त पतन (mukt patan), मुक्त पात (mukt pāt)
- Indonesian: jatuh bebas (id)
- Portuguese: queda livre f
- Turkish: serbest düşüş
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falling through atmosphere without additional drag devices
state of worsening out of control
Verb
freefall (third-person singular simple present freefalls, present participle freefalling, simple past freefell, past participle freefallen)
- (intransitive) To drop in a state of freefall.
1987 April 11, Pamela Wescott, “Judy Grahn: Pursuing the Work We Want”, in Gay Community News, page 8:Watching a mother raccoon urge her babies, one by one, to let go of their grip of the roof and free-fall into her outstretched arms, three feet below on the porch rail.
- A base jumper attempts to freefall for as long as possible before triggering the parachute.