0 to fall or to allow something to fall: --
Don't drop it!/Don't let it drop!
Amanda dropped her sunglasses in/into the fountain.
I'm always dropping things.
She dropped her keys.
1 to move to a lower level, or cause something to move to a lower level: --
2 to stop doing or planning something, especially an activity: --
3 to take someone to a particular place, usually in a car, and leave them there: --
4 to become available for people to buy, listen to, or watch, especially using the internet; to make something available like this: --
Drop-in centres for adolescents: planned to develop existing scheme to include accident prevention.
This can occur if it is possible for one of the losing candidates to win a seat when the other losing candidate(s) is dropped.
Outside a certain distance between utterances, the coherence drops off and is highly scattered.
There was no significant difference between drop-outs and completers on any demographic or clinical variables.
The size of the drop is virtually independent of surface tension.
Considering now the 45" entry, it is observed that the cavity pressure drop is considerably less than in the vertical and 60" cases.
First a straight ascension path, second a circular arc, and finally a straight vertical drop.
On day 5 of culture, embryos were transferred to drops of fresh media.