I.down1[美 daʊn, 英 daʊn]副down often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (back down, clamp down, tone down, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (back, clamp, tone, etc).
They rip down the wrong walls, paint rooms the wrong colour, make horrible kitchens, and with a sure instinct destroy whatever you liked about the place, especially the garden.
It is, moreover, a terrible idea to rip down legal barriers simply to get at someone, and that because they have a contiguous moral duty for a criminal.
Because they too beautiful or historic to rip down, they have forced developers to compromise, awkwardly fitting them into apartment blocks or nightclubs.
She switched in 2011 to the high-adrenalin world of ski cross, where four athletes rip down the mountain over bumps and jumps in a race to the finish line.