take a tumble



take a tumble

1. Literally, to fall suddenly to the ground. I took a bit of a tumble walking home from the pub last night, hence the bruises on my face.
2. To suffer a sudden fall or decline, as of profits, health, quality, etc. The price of shares in the tech giant took a tumble on Tuesday after it emerged that they had been manipulating sales figures over the last five years. My father has been doing remarkably well in his battle with cancer, but he has taken a tumble in the last few days.
See also: take, tumble

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Andrejs-Latvian
DeltaDEL-təEnglish
Genevajə-NEE-vəEnglish
Sandrine-French
Dani (1)DAN-eeEnglish
Nicolaos-Greek