English edit

Verb edit

bottom fall out (third-person singular simple present bottom falls out, present participle bottom falling out, simple past bottom fell out, past participle bottom fallen out)

  1. (idiomatic) To fail; to collapse; to worsen; to enter a state of disarray.
    • 1664, Samuel Rutherford, Joshua redivivus, or, Mr. Rutherfoord's letters [] [1], [Rotterdam?], page 243:
      Dear Brother, I cannot tell what is become of my labours among that people: If all that my Lord builded by me be caſten down, & the bottom fallen out of the profeſſion of that parish, [] how can I bear it?
    • 1889, Horatio Alger Jr., Luke Walton, or The Chicago Newsboy[2], Philadelphia: John C. Winston Co., page 132:
      With the ten thousand dollars, I hired an office, printed circulars, distributed glowing accounts of imaginary wealth, etc. It cost considerable[sic] for advertising, but I sold seventy thousand shares, and when I had gathered in the money I let the bottom fall out.
    • 1991 May 5, Stewart Ain, “Bottom Falls Out Of Summer Job Market”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN:
      But in the last four months, the bottom has fallen out of the job market, officials say.
    • 2003, James F. Petras, Henry Veltmeyer, System in Crisis: The Dynamics of Free Market Capitalism, page 10:
      The first major financial crisis occurred in Mexico, in December 1994, when the bottom fell out of the stock market []