Pass Definition–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
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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 fol. 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, esp. by vote: Congress passed the bill. | | 23. | to obtain the approval or sanction of (a legislative body, committee, etc.), esp. 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 passing shot 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 esp. 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. | | 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, esp. 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 pr
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onounce an opinion, judgment, verdict, etc. (usually fol. 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. | a. | (of a member of an inquest or other deliberative body) to sit (usually fol. by on or upon): to pass on a case of manslaughter. | | c. | to vest title or other legal interest in real or personal property in a new owner. | | | 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. | a. | to forgo one's opportunity to bid, play, etc. | | b. | to throw in one's hand. | |
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| 53. | Fencing Obsolete. to thrust or lunge. | –noun | 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. | a. | a military document granting the right to cross lines or to enter or leave a military or naval base or building. | | b. | written authority given a soldier to leave a station or duty for a specified period of time. | | | 60. | a free ticket or permit: two passes to a concert; a railroad pass. | | 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. | | 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. | a. | a gesture, action, or remark that is intended to be sexually inviting; amorous overture. | | b. | a jab or poke with the arm, esp. one that misses its mark. | | | 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. | (in feats of magic) | a. | a passing of the hand over, along, or before anything. | | b. | the transference or changing of objects by or as by sleight of hand; a manipulation, as of a juggler. | | | 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 or 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, | a. | to cease; end: All this trouble will pass away. | | b. | to die: He passed away during the night. | | | 77. | pass for, to be accepted as; be considered: material that passed for silk. | | 78. | pass off, | a. | to present or offer (something) under false pretenses; dispose of deceptively: to pass off a spurious de Kooning on a gullible buyer. | | b. | to cause to be accepted or received under a false identity: He passed himself off as a doctor. | | c. | to cease gradually; end: The headache passed off in the late afternoon. | | d. | to disregard or ignore. | | e. | to continue to completion; occur: The meeting passed off without incident. | | | 79. | pass on, to die: The patient passed on after a long illness. | | 80. | pass over, | a. | to disregard; ignore: Just pass over the first part of his letter. | | b. | to fail to take notice of or consider: He was passed over for the promotion. | | | 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. muster (def. 11). | | 85. | pass out, Informal. | a. | to lose consciousness; faint. | | c. | to distribute, esp. individually by hand: to pass out discount coupons on a street corner. | | d. | to walk or march out or through; leave or exit by means of: The graduates will pass out the center aisle after receiving their diplomas. Pass out this door and turn left. | | e. | to be exempted or promoted from: Jerry passed out of freshman composition on the basis of his entering essay. | | | From Dictionary
Drug Definition–noun | 1. | Pharmacology. a chemical substance used in the treatment, cure, prevention, or diagnosis of disease or used to otherwise enhance physical or mental well-being. | | 2. | (in federal law) | a. | any substance recognized in the official pharmacopoeia or formulary of the nation. | | b. | any substance intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in humans or other animals. | | c. | any article, other than food, intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of humans or other animals. | | d. | any substance intended for use as a component of such a drug, but not a device or a part of a device. | | | 3. | a habit-forming medicinal or illicit substance, esp. a narcotic. | | 4. | drugs, | a. | chem
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ical substances prepared and sold as pharmaceutical items, either by prescription or over the counter. | | b. | personal hygienic items sold in a drugstore, as toothpaste, mouthwash, etc. | | | 5. | Obsolete. any ingredient used in chemistry, pharmacy, dyeing, or the like. | –verb (used with object) | 6. | to administer a medicinal drug to. | | 7. | to stupefy or poison with a drug. | | 8. | to mix (food or drink) with a drug, esp. a stupefying, narcotic, or poisonous drug. | | 9. | to administer anything nauseous to. | —Verb phrase | 10. | drug up, to take a narcotic drug: The addict prowled about for a place to drug up. | —Idiom | 11. | drug on the market, a commodity that is overabundant or in excess of demand in the market. Also, drug in the market. | | From Dictionary
Test Definition–noun | 1. | the means by which the presence, quality, or genuineness of anything is determined; a means of trial. | | 2. | the trial of the quality of something: to put to the test. | | 3. | a particular process or method for trying or assessing. | | 4. | a set of questions, problems, or the like, used as a means of evaluating the abilities, aptitudes, skills, or performance of an individual or group; examination. | | 5. | Psychology. a set of standardized questions, problems, or tasks designed to elicit responses for use in measuring the traits, capacities, or achievements of an individual. | | 6. | Chemistry. | a. | the process of identifying or detecting the presence of a constituent of a substance, or of determining the nature of a substance, commonly by the addition of a reagent. | | c. | an indication or evidence of the presence of a constituent, or of the nature of a su
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bstance, obtained by such means. | | | 7. | an oath or other confirmation of one's loyalty, religious beliefs, etc. | | 8. | British. a cupel for refining or assaying metals. | –verb (used with object) | 9. | to subject to a test of any kind; try. | | 10. | Chemistry. to subject to a chemical test. | | 11. | Metallurgy. to assay or refine in a cupel. | –verb (used without object) | 12. | to undergo a test or trial; try out. | | 13. | to perform on a test: People test better in a relaxed environment. | | 14. | to conduct a test: to test for diabetes. | | From Dictionary
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