1 My child, you are far too young to think of falling in love.
2 "I hope he will fall into proper hands," continued the old man.
3 It was very low at first, with deep mellow notes that seemed to fall singly upon one's ear.
4 Dorian Gray falls in love with a beautiful girl who acts Juliet, and proposes to marry her.
5 A cold rain began to fall, and the blurred street-lamps looked ghastly in the dripping mist.
6 There has not been a scandal in the neighbourhood since the time of Queen Elizabeth, and consequently they all fall asleep after dinner.
7 Of course, she would fall in love with him, and he with her, and they would get married, and come home, and live in an immense house in London.
8 "Women are not always allowed a choice," he answered, but hardly had he finished the sentence before from the far end of the conservatory came a stifled groan, followed by the dull sound of a heavy fall.
9 The mere cadence of the sentences, the subtle monotony of their music, so full as it was of complex refrains and movements elaborately repeated, produced in the mind of the lad, as he passed from chapter to chapter, a form of reverie, a malady of dreaming, that made him unconscious of the falling day and creeping shadows.
10 Fortunately for him she had on the other side Lord Faudel, a most intelligent middle-aged mediocrity, as bald as a ministerial statement in the House of Commons, with whom she was conversing in that intensely earnest manner which is the one unpardonable error, as he remarked once himself, that all really good people fall into, and from which none of them ever quite escape.