passer

An user
Voulait-il  passer   la   soirée
🌆
  près   de  Cosette?

Wollte er den Abend in der Nähe von Cosette verbringen?

(Englisch)

  1. to go past
  2. to cross (a border)
  3. to pass
  4. to spend (time)
  5. to publish (a newspaper)
  6. (transitive) to take, to sit (an exam or test)
  7. (intransitive) to pass (an exam or test)
  8. (dated) (transitive) to pass (an exam or test)
  9. to run
  10. to exceed (a limit)
  11. to percolate
  12. to hand down, to pass on
  13. to be allowed
  14. (intransitive) to pass, to go (between two entities)
  15. (transitive) to show (a movie)
  16. to go up (a grade)
  17. to shift (change gear)
  18. to shift (change gear)
  19. to stop by, to pop in
  20. to pass away, to die
  21. to spin (e.g. a disk)
  22. to show (be on television)
  23. to pass (kick, throw, hit etc. the ball to another player)
  24. to pass (the relay baton)
  25. to pass on (infect someone else with a disease)
  26. (transitive) to put, to place, to slip (move a part of one's body somewhere else)
  27. to wipe, rub
  28. to skip a go
  29. to put (make something undergo something)
  30. to pass (not play upon one's turn)
  31. (reflexive) to take place, to happen, to come to pass
  32. (reflexive) to go by
  33. (reflexive) to do without
  34. to don
  35. (intransitive) to be thought to be, to be said to be, to be taken for

Frequenz

A1
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/pa.se/
Etymologie (Englisch)

In summary

Inherited from Middle French passer, from Old French passer, from Vulgar Latin *passāre, derived from Latin passus (“step”, noun).

Related words
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