passed over
通过了,通过的,通过,通过率
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
- : to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
- : to let go without notice, action, remark, etc.; leave unconsidered; disregard; overlook: Pass chapter two and go on to chapter three.
- : to omit the usual or regular payment of: The company decided to pass its dividend in the third quarter of the year.
- : to cause or allow to go through or beyond a gate, barrier, etc.: The guard checked the identification papers and then passed the visitor.
- : to go across or over; cross.
- : to endure or undergo: They passed the worst night of their lives.
- : to undergo or complete successfully: to pass an examination.
- : to cause or permit to complete successfully: I am passing the whole class this term.
- : to go beyond; transcend; exceed; surpass.
- : to cause to go or extend farther: to pass a rope through a hole.
- : to cause to go, move, or march by: to pass troops in review.
- : to allot to oneself; spend: He decided to pass a year abroad.
- : to live through, utilize, or fill; occupy oneself during: How to pass the time?
- : to cause to circulate or spread; disseminate: to pass rumors.
- : to cause to be accepted or received: to pass a worthless check.
- : to convey, transfer, or transmit; deliver: Pass this memo on after reading it.
- : to convey from one person, hand, etc., to another: Please pass the salt.
- : to pledge: to pass one's word of honor to remain loyal.
- : to utter, pronounce, or speak: She passed a remark about every passerby.
- : to cause to go through something, as a process or agency: to pass returning travelers through customs.
- : to discharge or void from the body, as excrement or a kidney stone.
- : to sanction or approve, especially by vote: Congress passed the bill.
- : to obtain the approval or sanction of, especially by a vote: The bill passed Congress on the second vote.
- : to express or pronounce, as an opinion: to pass judgment without knowing the facts.
- : Law. to place legal title or interest in by a conveyance, a will, or other transfer.
- : to perform a pass on.
- : Tennis. to make a passing shot against.
- : Sports. to transfer to a teammate.
- : Bullfighting. to provoke and guide the charge of with the capa or especially the muleta.
- 1
- : to go or move onward; proceed.
- : to come to or toward, then go beyond: to pass by a shop; to pass through town.
- : to go away; depart: The dizzy feeling will pass in a minute.
- : to elapse or slip by; be spent: The day passed very quickly for him.
- : to come to an end: The crisis soon passed.
- : to die.
- : to take place; happen; occur: What passed while I was on vacation?
- : to go by or move past: The funeral procession passed slowly.
- : to go about or circulate; be current.
- : to serve as a marginally acceptable substitute: The facsimile isn't very good but it will pass.
- : 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.
- : to be transferred or conveyed: The crown passed to the king's nephew.
- : to be interchanged, as between two persons: Sharp words passed between them.
- : to undergo transition or conversion: to pass from a solid to a liquid state.
- : to go or get through a barrier, test, course of study, etc., successfully: Of the twenty who took the exam, only twelve passed.
- : to go unheeded, unchallenged, or unremarked on: He decided to let the insult pass.
- : to express or pronounce an opinion, judgment, verdict, etc.: Will you pass on the authenticity of this drawing?
- : to be voided, as excrement or a kidney stone.
- : to obtain the vote of approval or sanction of a legislative body, official committee, or the like: The new tax bill finally passed.
- : Law. to sit: to pass on a case of manslaughter.to adjudicate.to vest title or other legal interest in real or personal property in a new owner.
- : to throw a ball from one person to another, as in a game of catch.
- : Sports. to make a pass, as in football or ice hockey.
- : Cards. to forgo one's opportunity to bid, play, etc.to throw in one's hand.
- : Fencing Obsolete. to thrust or lunge.
- 1
- : an act of passing.
- : a narrow route across a relatively low notch or depression in a mountain barrier.
- : a road, channel, or other way providing a means of passage, as through an obstructed region or other barrier.
- : a navigable channel, as at the mouth or in the delta of a river.
- : a permission or license to pass, go, come, or enter.
- : Military. a military document granting the right to cross lines or to enter or leave a military or naval base or building.written authority given a soldier to leave a station or duty for a specified period of time.
- : a free ticket or permit: two passes to a concert; a railroad pass.
- : South African. reference book.
- : Chiefly British. the act of passing a university or school examination or course without honors or distinction.
- : Sports. the transfer of a ball or puck from one teammate to another.
- : Baseball. base on balls.
- : Fencing. a thrust or lunge.
- : a single movement, effort, maneuver, etc.: He made a pass at the control tower of the enemy airfield.
- : Informal. a gesture, action, or remark that is intended to be sexually inviting; amorous overture.a jab or poke with the arm, especially one that misses its mark.
- : Cards. the act or statement of not bidding or raising another bid: There have been two passes and now it's your bid.
- : a passing of the hand over, along, or before anything.the transference or changing of objects by or as by sleight of hand; a manipulation, as of a juggler.
- : a particular stage or state of affairs: The economic situation had come to a dreadful pass.
- : Bullfighting. a pase.
- : one passage of a tool over work or one passage of work through a machine.
- : Archaic. a witty remark or thrust.
- : Mining. an opening for delivering coal or ore to a lower level underground.
- 1
- : pass along / through to add to the amount charged a client or customer: Airlines were passing along the sudden increase in fuel prices.
- : pass away, to cease; end: All this trouble will pass away.to die: He passed away during the night.
- : 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.
- : pass off, to present or offer under false pretenses; dispose of deceptively: to pass off a spurious de Kooning on a gullible buyer.to cause to be accepted or received under a false identity: He passed himself off as a doctor.to cease gradually; end: The headache passed off in the late afternoon.to disregard or ignore.to continue to completion; occur: The meeting passed off without incident.
- : pass on, to die: The patient passed on after a long illness.
- : pass over, to disregard; ignore: Just pass over the first part of his letter.to fail to take notice of, consider, or choose: He was passed over for the promotion.
- : pass up, to refuse or neglect to take advantage of; reject: The opportunity may not come again, so don't pass it up.
Phrases
- pass away
- pass by
- pass for
- pass muster
- pass off
- pass on
- pass one's lips
- pass out
- pass over
- pass the buck
- pass the hat
- pass the time
- pass the torch
- pass through one's mind
- pass up
- pass with flying colors
- bring about (to pass)
- come about (to pass)
- cross (pass through) one's mind
- head someone off (at the pass)
- in passing
- make (take) a pass at
- ships that pass in the night
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
San Francisco was the first city to pass one in 2006; since then, 14 other cities and three states have followed suit.
Congress is attempting to pass the buck on federal funding for education.
“They just walk around, they ride in their patrol cars, and they just pass by,” he said.
Typically, aircraft will work in pairs where the flight lead will make an initial pass to mark a target with rockets.
He goes into some detail into what it took to persuade voters to pass marriage equality at the ballot box in four states in 2012.
Let the thought of self pass in, and the beauty of great action is gone, like the bloom from a soiled flower.
The riches of the unjust shall be dried up like a river, and shall pass away with a noise like a great thunder in rain.
But men, through neglecting the rules of health, pass quickly to old age, and die before reaching that term.
Madame and myself had just been regretting that we should have to pass the evening in this miserable hole of a town.
He shall pass into strange countries: for he shall try good and evil among men.