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Antonyms for "rise" — opposites and contrasting words to add tension, contrast, or precision to your writing.
(v)
(transitive) To put (something) down, to rest.
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(n)
The act of declining or refusing something.
(intransitive) To rest in a horizontal position on a surface.
(heading, intransitive) To be moved downwards.
(intransitive) To progressively lose its splendor, value, ardor, power, intensity etc.; to decline.
An instance of descending; act of coming down.
Senses relating to moving from a higher to a lower position.
(intransitive) To assume a horizontal position.
A precipitous decline in fortune; death or rapid deterioration, as in status or wealth.
(heading, physical) To move or be moved into something.
(adv)
Down a slope.
(intransitive) To stop working on a permanent basis, usually because of old age or illness.
(transitive, idiomatic) To submit something; to give.
(intransitive, copulative, of a person) To be in a position in which the upper body is upright and supported by the buttocks.
(intransitive) To assume a sitting position from a standing position.
To descend; to move from a higher place to a lower one.
(idiomatic) To collapse or fail, e.g. by going bankrupt.
(geomorphology) The downward slope of a curve.
(intransitive) To decrease.
(slang) To go to bed.
(slang) To fall asleep, usually from implied exhaustion.
(UK, slang) To sleep somewhere other than home, forced to do so by circumstances.
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see drop, down.
To lie down to sleep, put oneself in one's bed.
go to bed in order to sleep
To fall asleep.