write some saying of saint on"falling of trees"
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Answer:
Actually, people do say falling of trees, but only in a passive voices—but, I digress!
Without knowing it, you have by your question also answered your question which, indeed, would have been more apropos had it asked, why do we not say fall a tree; but instead resort to a convention which holds that to sever a tree trunk is to fell the tree to which the tree belongs … after a sense in which it had not already fallen; viz., it had not fell.
By now—and by the word, convention, it should be obvious that “we” (and others) are rhetorically safe resorting to such a convention—that of using a passive voice to represent an active voice—because situations do not typically come to pass which would give rise to any person’s saying (to the effect that), “Look! That tree fell.” And in most such cases (as is not exemplified by a stroll through an old growth forest) such falling(s) would each be a one time phenomenon accompanied by the sounds of axes or saws; and the words “look ….uh ere… t-i-m-b-e-r. Accordingly, when a logging foreman had need, it was only a matter of time before a need for a convention other than ordering, “You there! Go over there and chop that tree’s trunk until it falls over,” was needed before such commands as “Go make that tree a fallen tree”; to “Get those trees all felled before any Olympias”; to “Rainiers for all after you all fell that entire section.”
So that, my friend, is why these days we Washingtonians fell trees instead of falling them before we go home to the boondocks for a night and morning of state sponsored beer drinking.
Answer:
no one will the information and the book is great