- slump down
- slump down[for someone] to collapse and fall down; [for someone] to crumple. •
The shot hit Max and he slumped down.
•Suddenly, Mr. Wilson slumped down in pain.
Dictionary of American idioms. 2013.
The shot hit Max and he slumped down.
•Suddenly, Mr. Wilson slumped down in pain.
Dictionary of American idioms. 2013.
slump down in — phr verb Slump down in is used with these nouns as the object: ↑chair … Collocations dictionary
slump down on — phr verb Slump down on is used with these nouns as the object: ↑sofa … Collocations dictionary
slump down into — phr verb Slump down into is used with these nouns as the object: ↑chair … Collocations dictionary
slump down onto — phr verb Slump down onto is used with these nouns as the object: ↑sofa … Collocations dictionary
slump — Synonyms and related words: arrear, arrearage, arrears, bad times, be found wanting, bear market, bearish market, beat down, boom, bottoming out, break, business cycle, business fluctuations, bust, cadence, catabasis, catenary, cave, cave in,… … Moby Thesaurus
Slump — is a form of mass wasting event that occurs when loosely consolidated materials or rock layers move a short distance down a slope. The landmass and the surface it slumps upon is called a failure surface. When the movement occurs in soil, there is … Wikipedia
slump — [n] decline, failure bad period, bad times, blight, blue devils*, blue funk*, bottom, bust, collapse, crash, depreciation, depression, descent, dip, downer*, downslide*, downswing*, downtrend, downturn, drop, dumps*, fall, falling off*, funk,… … New thesaurus
Down in the Groove — Studio album by Bob Dylan Released May 30, 1988 … Wikipedia
slump — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ global, world, worldwide ▪ economic, price, property, stock market ▪ The share price slump has wiped about $10 bil … Collocations dictionary
slump — A temporary fall in performance, often describing consistently falling security prices for several weeks or months. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * slump slump [slʌmp] noun [countable usually singular] 1. a sudden fall in the price, value,… … Financial and business terms
slump — slump1 [slʌmp] v [Date: 1600 1700; Origin: Probably from a [i]Scandinavian language] 1.) to fall or lean against something because you are not strong enough to stand slump against/over/back etc ▪ She slumped against the wall. ▪ Carol slumped back … Dictionary of contemporary English