A noticeable deterioration in performance or quality.
1 Mattel blamed a decline in product orders from retailers for the falloff .
2 Then came the new coronavirus, jobless tenants leaving town and a rent falloff .
3 Tribune's newspapers remain profitable despite the falloff in readers and advertising.
4 Orlando suffered no evident falloff after last year's mass shooting in a gay nightclub.
5 But the falloff in Goldman's business is striking nevertheless.
6 This eliminates most of the falloff in growth that R&R find from high debt levels.
7 The US government today reported a bigger-than expected falloff in jobless workers applying for state unemployment aid.
8 Pullbacks in those subsidies, however, have stoked concerns about a dramatic falloff in demand in the subsidy-dependent sector.
9 The State's tax take was marginally below expectations last month because of a falloff in corporation tax receipts.
10 Recession in the main donor states has resulted in cuts to aid budgets and a falloff in individual donations.
11 Still, the decline was smaller than the 10 percent falloff for National Football League games during the regular season.
12 But then the falloff continued.
13 The electric GP shows a strong falloff with Q2, and its global behavior does not follow a simple dipole form.
14 The distal-50% falloff length of the luminescence signals provided the lowest mean squared error among the optical parameters.
15 Boeing is struggling as the worldwide airline sector has been rocked by the travel demand falloff from the coronavirus pandemic.
16 The limited depth-of-field and extreme falloff of sharpness at the edges lend a kind of Lomo-esque surreality to the images.
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