Phrasal verbs with pass
A large number of phrasal verbs use the word pass. The most common among them are given below.
Pass away
To pass away is to die.
- My grandmother passed away last week after a prolonged battle with cancer.
Pass as / pass for
To pass for someone/something is to be accepted (often wrongly) as being a particular type of person of thing. The phrasal verb pass as also means the same.
- She is nearly forty-five, but she could easily pass for thirty. (= She could easily be accepted as a thirty-year old woman.)
Pass by
To pass by someone/something is to go past.
- We passed by a super market.
- As I passed by her window, I heard her speaking on the phone.
- Somebody passed by the window, but I couldn’t see their face.
If something passes you by, you fail to notice it.
- ‘Did you notice that weird expression on her face?’ ‘No, it completely passed me by.’
If something passes you by, you fail to take advantage of the opportunities it offers.
- I have always felt that life is just passing me by. I wish I could do something more worthwhile.
Pass on
To pass something on is to give someone something that someone else has given you.
- Could you please pass this message on to Peter?
- Could you please pass the salt?
- When your kids outgrow their clothes, you could pass them on to someone else who might need them.
Pass on can also mean ‘to transmit an infection’.
- If your daughter is down with flu, don’t send her to school. Otherwise, she will pass on the virus to everyone in her class.
- When the price of raw materials increases, manufacturers almost always pass the extra costs on to the consumer.