pasar
Meaning
- (transitive) to pass, to hand, to slip
- (intransitive) to happen
- (transitive) to pass, to get past, to go past, to go by, to go over, to get through
- (transitive) to pass time
- (intransitive) to enter a room
- (reflexive) to go too far, exaggerate
- (reflexive) to exceed, surpass, go over
- (reflexive) to ripen too much, become rotten, become off (food)
- (transitive) to pass (filter)
- (transitive) to strain, to sieve, to sift
- (transitive) to break the law, rule, order
- (transitive) to trespass (enter on someone's property without permission)
- to puree (crush or grind food into a puree)
- to omit, leave out
- (transitive) to send, transmit
- (transitive) to stand, tolerate, bear
- to go through, to pass through, to swing by (+ por)
- to begin a process or action; (with ser) to become, to come to be
- (Latin-America) to pass an exam
- (pronominal) to stop by, to swing by
- (pronominal) to spend (time)
Concepts
yield
be due to
drive past
fly past
glide by
slide by
smuggle in
travel by
be reputed
make pass
devolve
go across
Synonyms
hacer un pase
imputar al ejercicio siguiente
dejar atrás
llegar primero
llegar a ocurrir
llegar a pasar
jondiar
roliar
ondar
pansar
no funcionar
bipear
cobrar fama
tener reputación
tener fama
mayor ser en cuerpo
Frequency
Hyphenated as
pa‧sar
Pronounced as (IPA)
/paˈsaɾ/
Etymology
In summary
Inherited from Old Spanish passar, from Vulgar Latin *passāre, derived from Latin passus (“step”, noun). Compare English pass.
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Notes
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Sentences
Por ello
, continuamente deja pasar oportunidades de asesinarla .
Therefore, he continually misses opportunities to murder her.