tomber

French

Etymology

From Middle French tomber, from Old French tumber, itself either of expressive/onomatopoetic origin (compare also Catalan tombar, Portuguese tombar, Spanish tumbar, Romanian tumbă, etc.), or alternatively possibly from a Frankish *tūmōn (to rotate, reel, sway), from Proto-Germanic *tūmōną (to turn, rotate), of uncertain origin. Cognate with Old High German tūmōn (to rotate, turn round), Old Norse tumba (to fall, tumble), Old English tumbian (to dance about, leap, tumble). Largely displaced the native Latin word choir from Latin cadere. More at tumb.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tɔ̃.be/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -e

Verb

tomber

  1. to fall

Conjugation

Use the auxiliary être intranslatively, auxiliary avoir transitively.

Derived terms

References

Further reading

Anagrams


Middle French

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old French tumber.

Verb

tomber

  1. to fall

Conjugation

  • Middle French conjugation varies from one text to another. Hence, the following conjugation should be considered as typical, not as exhaustive.

Descendants

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