down

/daʊn/

तल

noun

1. down feather
soft fine feathers
2. down
(American football) a complete play to advance the football
"you have four downs to gain ten yards"
3. Down, John L. H. Down
English physician who first described Down's syndrome (1828-1896)
4. down
(usually plural) a rolling treeless highland with little soil
5. pile
fine soft dense hair (as the fine short hair of cattle or deer or the wool of sheep or the undercoat of certain dogs)

verb

1. toss off, pop, bolt down, belt down, pour down, drink down, kill
drink down entirely
"He downed three martinis before dinner"
"She killed a bottle of brandy that night"
"They popped a few beer after work"
2. devour, demolish, consume, go through
eat up completely, as with great appetite
"Some people can down a pound of meat in the course of one meal"
"The teenagers demolished four pizzas among them"
3. down
bring down or defeat (an opponent)
4. shoot down, land
shoot at and force to come down
"the enemy landed several of our aircraft"
5. knock down, cut down, push down, pull down
cause to come or go down
"The policeman downed the heavily armed suspect"
"The mugger knocked down the old lady after she refused to hand over her wallet"
6. polish, refine, fine-tune
improve or perfect by pruning or polishing
"refine one's style of writing"

adjective

1. down
being or moving lower in position or less in some value
"lay face down"
"the moon is down"
"our team is down by a run"
"down by a pawn"
"the stock market is down today"
2. downward
extending or moving from a higher to a lower place
"the down staircase"
"the downward course of the stream"
3. down
becoming progressively lower
"the down trend in the real estate market"
4. down
being put out by a strikeout
"two down in the bottom of the ninth"
5. down pat, mastered
understood perfectly
"had his algebra problems down"
6. depressed
lower than previously
"the market is depressed"
"prices are down"
7. down
shut
"the shades were down"
8. down
not functioning (temporarily or permanently)
"we can't work because the computer is down"
9. gloomy, grim, blue, depressed, dispirited, downcast, downhearted, down in the mouth, low, low-spirited
filled with melancholy and despondency
"gloomy at the thought of what he had to face"
"gloomy predictions"
"a gloomy silence"
"took a grim view of the economy"
"the darkening mood"
"lonely and blue in a strange city"
"depressed by the loss of his job"
"a dispirited and resigned expression on her face"
"downcast after his defeat"
"feeling discouraged and downhearted"

adverb

1. downwards, downward, downwardly
spatially or metaphorically from a higher to a lower level or position
"don't fall down"
"rode the lift up and skied down"
"prices plunged downward"
2. down
away from a more central or a more northerly place
"was sent down to work at the regional office"
"worked down on the farm"
"came down for the wedding"
"flew down to Florida"
3. down
paid in cash at time of purchase
"put ten dollars down on the necklace"
4. down
from an earlier time
"the story was passed down from father to son"
5. down
to a lower intensity
"he slowly phased down the light until the stage was completely black"
6. down
in an inactive or inoperative state
"the factory went down during the strike"
"the computer went down again"

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