| an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle. |
| a gadget; dingus; thingumbob. |
pass (pɑːs) ![]() | |
| —vb (often foll by away | |
| 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. | (tr) 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. | 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. | (intr) 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. | (intr) to undergo change or transition: to pass from joy to despair |
| 14. | 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. | (tr) (of a legislative measure) to undergo (a procedural stage) and be agreed: the bill passed the committee stage |
| 17. | 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. | (intr) 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. | (intr) to come to an end or disappear: his anger soon passed |
| 23. | (intr; |
| 24. | (intr; |
| 25. | chiefly (US) (tr) to fail to declare (a dividend) |
| 26. | chiefly (US) (intr; |
| 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 |
| —n | |
| 30. | the act of passing |
| 31. | a. a route through a range of mountains where the summit is lower or where there is a gap between peaks |
| b. (capital as part of a name): the Simplon Pass | |
| 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. | a. a document allowing entry to and exit from a military installation |
| b. a document authorizing leave of absence | |
| 35. | (Brit) |
| a. the passing of a college or university examination to a satisfactory standard but not as high as honours | |
| b. Compare honours (as modifier): a pass degree | |
| 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 |
| —interj | |
| 45. | bridge a call indicating that a player has no bid to make |
| [C13: from Old French passer to pass, surpass, from Latin passūs step, | |
pass (pās)
v. passed, pass·ing, pass·es
To go across; go through.
To cause to move into a certain position.
To cease to exist; die.
To be voided from the body.
pass definition
|
pass on
See pass away.
Transfer something, as in Sign the card and then pass it on to the others, or Grandpa passed his tools on to his favorite grandson. Also see pass the torch.