Passes


[pas, pahs] /pæs, pɑs/

verb (used with object)
1.
to move past; go by:
to pass another car on the road.
2.
to let go without notice, action, remark, etc.; leave unconsidered; disregard; overlook:
Pass chapter two and go on to chapter three.
3.
to omit the usual or regular payment of:
The company decided to pass its dividend in the third quarter of the year.
4.
to cause or allow to go through or beyond a gate, barrier, etc.:
The guard checked the identification papers and then passed the visitor.
5.
to go across or over (a stream, threshold, etc.); cross.
6.
to endure or undergo:
They passed the worst night of their lives.
7.
to undergo or complete successfully:
to pass an examination.
8.
to cause or permit to complete successfully (an investigation, examination, course of study, etc.):
I am passing the whole class this term.
9.
to go beyond (a point, degree, stage, etc.); transcend; exceed; surpass.
10.
to cause to go or extend farther:
to pass a rope through a hole.
11.
to cause to go, move, or march by:
to pass troops in review.
12.
to allot to oneself (a portion of time); spend:
He decided to pass a year abroad.
13.
to live through, utilize, or fill; occupy oneself during:
How to pass the time?
14.
to cause to circulate or spread; disseminate:
to pass rumors.
15.
to cause to be accepted or received:
to pass a worthless check.
16.
to convey, transfer, or transmit; deliver (often followed by on):
Pass this memo on after reading it.
17.
to convey from one person, hand, etc., to another:
Please pass the salt.
18.
to pledge:
to pass one’s word of honor to remain loyal.
19.
to utter, pronounce, or speak:
She passed a remark about every passerby.
20.
to cause to go through something, as a process or agency:
to pass returning travelers through customs.
21.
to discharge or void from the body, as excrement or a kidney stone.
22.
to sanction or approve, especially by vote:
Congress passed the bill.
23.
to obtain the approval or sanction of (a legislative body, committee, etc.), especially by a vote:
The bill passed Congress on the second vote.
24.
to express or pronounce, as an opinion:
to pass judgment without knowing the facts.
25.
Law. to place legal title or interest in (another) by a conveyance, a will, or other transfer.
26.
(in feats of magic) to perform a pass on.
27.
Tennis. to make a against (an opponent).
28.
Sports. to transfer (the ball or puck) to a teammate.
29.
Bullfighting. (of a bullfighter) to provoke and guide the charge of (a bull) with the capa or especially the muleta.
verb (used without object)
30.
to go or move onward; proceed.
31.
to come to or toward, then go beyond:
to pass by a shop; to pass through town.
32.
to go away; depart:
The dizzy feeling will pass in a minute.
33.
to elapse or slip by; be spent:
The day passed very quickly for him.
34.
to come to an end:
The crisis soon passed.
35.
to die.
36.
to take place; happen; occur:
What passed while I was on vacation?
37.
to go by or move past:
The funeral procession passed slowly.
38.
to go about or circulate; be current.
39.
to serve as a marginally acceptable substitute:
The facsimile isn’t very good but it will pass.
40.
to live or be known as a member of a racial, religious, or ethnic group other than one’s own, especially to live and be known as a white person although of black ancestry.
41.
to be transferred or conveyed:
The crown passed to the king’s nephew.
42.
to be interchanged, as between two persons:
Sharp words passed between them.
43.
to undergo transition or conversion:
to pass from a solid to a liquid state.
44.
to go or get through a barrier, test, course of study, etc., successfully:
Of the twenty who took the exam, only twelve passed.
45.
to go unheeded, unchallenged, or unremarked on:
He decided to let the insult pass.
46.
to express or pronounce an opinion, judgment, verdict, etc. (usually followed by on or upon):
Will you pass on the authenticity of this drawing?
47.
to be voided, as excrement or a kidney stone.
48.
to obtain the vote of approval or sanction of a legislative body, official committee, or the like:
The new tax bill finally passed.
49.
Law.

50.
to throw a ball from one person to another, as in a game of catch.
51.
Sports. to make a pass, as in football or ice hockey.
52.
Cards.

53.
Fencing Obsolete. to thrust or lunge.
noun
54.
an act of passing.
55.
a narrow route across a relatively low notch or depression in a mountain barrier.
56.
a road, channel, or other way providing a means of passage, as through an obstructed region or other barrier.
57.
a navigable channel, as at the mouth or in the delta of a river.
58.
a permission or license to pass, go, come, or enter.
59.
Military.

60.
a free ticket or permit:
two passes to a concert; a railroad pass.
61.
South African. (def 2).
62.
Chiefly British. the act of passing a university or school examination or course without honors or distinction.
63.
Sports. the transfer of a ball or puck from one teammate to another.
64.
Baseball. .
65.
Fencing. a thrust or lunge.
66.
a single movement, effort, maneuver, etc.:
He made a pass at the control tower of the enemy airfield.
67.
Informal.

68.
Cards. the act or statement of not bidding or raising another bid:
There have been two passes and now it’s your bid.
69.

70.
a particular stage or state of affairs:
The economic situation had come to a dreadful pass.
71.
Bullfighting. a pase.
72.
one passage of a tool over work or one passage of work through a machine.
73.
Archaic. a witty remark or thrust.
74.
Mining. an opening for delivering coal or ore to a lower level underground.
Verb phrases
75.
pass along/through, to add (incurred extra costs or expenses) to the amount charged a client or customer:
Airlines were passing along the sudden increase in fuel prices.
76.
pass away,

77.
pass for/as, to be accepted as; be considered: material that passed for silk;
The candidate could pass as Latino or Anglo, appealing to both constituencies.
78.
pass off,

79.
pass on, to die:
The patient passed on after a long illness.
80.
pass over,

81.
pass up, to refuse or neglect to take advantage of; reject:
The opportunity may not come again, so don’t pass it up.
Idioms
82.
bring to pass, to cause to happen; bring about:
His wife’s death brought to pass a change in his attitude toward religion.
83.
come to pass, to occur; happen:
Strange things came to pass.
84.
pass muster. (def 11).
85.
pass out, Informal.

[pahs] /pɑs/
noun, French.
1.
the numbers 19 through 36 in roulette.
[pa-sey; for 4 also French pah-sey] /pæˈseɪ; for 4 also French pɑˈseɪ/
adjective
1.
no longer fashionable, in wide use, etc.; out-of-date; outmoded:
There were many photographs of passé fashions. I thought hand-cranked pencil sharpeners were passé.
2.
past:
time passé.
3.
past the prime of one’s life.
noun, plural passés
[pa-seyz; French pah-sey] /pæˈseɪz; French pɑˈseɪ/ (Show IPA)
4.
Ballet. a movement in which one leg passes behind or in front of the other.
/pɑːs/
verb
1.
to go onwards or move by or past (a person, thing, etc)
2.
to run, extend, or lead through, over, or across (a place): the route passes through the city
3.
to go through or cause to go through (an obstacle or barrier): to pass a needle through cloth
4.
to move or cause to move onwards or over: he passed his hand over her face
5.
(transitive) to go beyond or exceed: this victory passes all expectation
6.
to gain or cause to gain an adequate or required mark, grade, or rating in (an examination, course, etc): the examiner passed them all
7.
often foll by away or by. to elapse or allow to elapse: we passed the time talking
8.
pass the time of day with someone, to spend time amicably with someone, esp in chatting, with no particular purpose
9.
(intransitive) to take place or happen: what passed at the meeting?
10.
to speak or exchange or be spoken or exchanged: angry words passed between them
11.
to spread or cause to spread: we passed the news round the class
12.
to transfer or exchange or be transferred or exchanged: the bomb passed from hand to hand
13.
(intransitive) to undergo change or transition: to pass from joy to despair
14.
when tr, often foll by down. to transfer or be transferred by inheritance: the house passed to the younger son
15.
to agree to or sanction or to be agreed to or receive the sanction of a legislative body, person of authority, etc: the assembly passed 10 resolutions
16.
(transitive) (of a legislative measure) to undergo (a procedural stage) and be agreed: the bill passed the committee stage
17.
when tr, often foll by on or upon. to pronounce or deliver (judgment, findings, etc): the court passed sentence
18.
to go or allow to go without comment or censure: the intended insult passed unnoticed
19.
(intransitive) to opt not to exercise a right, as by not answering a question or not making a bid or a play in card games
20.
(physiol) to discharge (urine, faeces, etc) from the body
21.
pass water, to urinate
22.
(intransitive) to come to an end or disappear: his anger soon passed
23.
(intransitive; usually foll by for or as) to be likely to be mistaken for or accepted as (someone or something else): you could easily pass for your sister
24.
(intransitive; foll by away, on, or over) a euphemism for die1 (sense 1)
25.
(transitive) (mainly US) to fail to declare (a dividend)
26.
(intransitive; usually foll by on or upon) (mainly US) (of a court, jury, etc) to sit in judgment; adjudicate
27.
(sport) to hit, kick, or throw (the ball) to another player
28.
(archaic) bring to pass, to cause to happen
29.
come to pass, to happen
noun
30.
the act of passing
31.

32.
a way through any difficult region
33.
a permit, licence, or authorization to do something without restriction: she has a pass to visit the museum on Sundays
34.

35.
(Brit)

36.
a dive, sweep, or bombing or landing run by an aircraft
37.
a motion of the hand or of a wand as a prelude to or part of a conjuring trick
38.
(informal) an attempt, in words or action, to invite sexual intimacy (esp in the phrase make a pass at)
39.
a state of affairs or condition, esp a bad or difficult one (esp in the phrase a pretty pass)
40.
(sport) the transfer of a ball from one player to another
41.
(fencing) a thrust or lunge with a sword
42.
(bridge) the act of passing (making no bid)
43.
(bullfighting) a variant of pase
44.
(archaic) a witty sally or remark
interjection
45.
(bridge) a call indicating that a player has no bid to make
/ˈpɑːseɪ; ˈpɑseɪ; French pɑse/
adjective
1.
out-of-date: passé ideas
2.
past the prime; faded: a passé society beauty
v.

late 13c. (transitive) “to go by (something),” also “to cross over,” from Old French passer (11c.), from Vulgar Latin *passare “to step, walk, pass” (cf. Spanish pasar, Italian passare), from Latin passus “step, pace” (see pace (n.)). Intransitive sense of “to go on, to move forward, make one’s way” is attested from c.1300. Figurative sense of “to experience, undergo” (as in pass the time) is first recorded late 14c. Sense of “to go through an examination successfully” is from early 15c. Meaning “decline to do something” is attested from 1869, originally in cards (euchre). In football, hockey, soccer, etc., the meaning “to transfer the ball or puck to another player” is from c.1865. Related: Passed; passing.

The meaning “to be thought to be something one is not” (especially in racial sense) is from 1935, from pass oneself off (as), first found 1809. The general verb sense of “to be accepted as equivalent” is from 1590s. Pass up “decline, refuse” is attested from 1896. Pass the buck is from 1865, said to be poker slang reference to the buck horn-handled knife that was passed around to signify whose turn it was to deal. Pass the hat “seek contributions” is from 1762. Pass-fail as a grading method is attested from 1955, American English.
n.

“mountain defile,” c.1300, from Old French pas “step, track, passage,” from Latin passus “step, pace” (see pace (n.)).

“written permission to pass into, or through, a place,” 1590s, from pass (v.). Sense of “ticket for a free ride or admission” is first found 1838. Colloquial make a pass “offer an amorous advance” first recorded 1928, perhaps from a sporting sense. Phrase come to pass (late 15c.) uses the word with a sense of “completion, accomplishment.”
adj.

1775, from French passé (fem. passée) “past, faded,” past participle of passer “to pass” (see pass (v.)). Originally of a woman past the period of greatest beauty.

pass (pās)
v. passed, pass·ing, pass·es

noun phrase

Asexualadvance; proposition (1928+)

verb

Related Terms

make a pass at someone

[in the first verb sense, pass oneself off as is found by 1809]

Read Also:

  • Pass-fail

    [pas-feyl, pahs-] /ˈpæsˈfeɪl, ˈpɑs-/ noun, Education. 1. a system of grading in some educational institutions in which a student simply passes or fails instead of receiving a letter or numerical grade.

  • Pass go

    verb phrase To complete a difficult task or pass an important milestone in a project •Usu negative: Execs go to jail, do not pass go in the scandal [fr the game of Monopoly]

  • Passible

    [pas-uh-buh l] /ˈpæs ə bəl/ adjective 1. capable of feeling, especially suffering; susceptible of sensation or emotion; impressionable. /ˈpæsɪbəl/ adjective 1. susceptible to emotion or suffering; able to feel

  • Passifloraceous

    /ˌpæsɪflɔːˈreɪʃəs/ adjective 1. of, relating to, or belonging to the Passifloraceae, a tropical and subtropical family of climbing plants including the passionflowers: the flowers have five petals and threadlike parts forming a dense mass (corona) around the central disc

  • Passim

    [pas-im] /ˈpæs ɪm/ adverb, Latin. 1. here and there: used in bibliographic references to indicate that the writer has drawn upon material scattered throughout the source cited. [seek pahs-sim; English sik pas-im] /sik ˈpɑs sɪm; English sɪk ˈpæs ɪm/ adverb, Latin. 1. so throughout: used especially as a footnote to indicate that a word, phrase, […]


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