To make a judgment on or upon a person or case.
To cause to move or go; to send; to transfer from one person, place, or condition to another.
To depart, to cease, to come to an end.
To spend.
To go from one person to another.
To put through a sieve.
To be tolerated as a substitute for something else, to "do".
To reject; to pass up.
To happen.
In turn-based games, to decline to play in one's turn.
To proceed without hindrance or opposition.
To take a turn with (a line, gasket, etc.), as around a sail in furling, and make secure.
To utter; to pronounce; to pledge.
To die.
To cause to obtain entrance, admission, or conveyance.
In euchre, to decline to make the trump.
To transcend; to surpass; to excel; to exceed.
To put in circulation; to give currency to.
To live through; to have experience of; to undergo; to suffer.
To decline something that is offered or available.
To move or be moved from one place to another.
To change from one state to another (without the implication of progression).
To continue.
To elapse, to be spent.
To progress from one state to another; to advance.
To be conveyed or transferred by will, deed, or other instrument of conveyance.
To cause to advance by stages of progress; to carry on with success through an ordeal, examination, or action; specifically, to give legal or official sanction to; to ratify; to enact; to approve as valid and just.
To move (the ball or puck) to a teammate.
To kick (the ball) with precision rather than at full force.
To go by without noticing; to omit attention to; to take no note of; to disregard.
To eliminate (something) from the body by natural processes.
To be accepted by others as a member of a race, sex, or other group to which one does not belong or would not have originally appeared to belong; especially to be considered white although one has black ancestry, or a woman although one was assigned male at birth or vice versa.
To make a lunge or swipe.
To throw the ball, generally downfield, towards a teammate.
To decline or not attempt to answer a question.
To advance through all the steps or stages necessary to become valid or effective; to obtain the formal sanction of (a legislative body).
To achieve a successful outcome from.
To go past, by, over, or through; to proceed from one side to the other of; to move past.
A single movement, especially of a hand, at, over, or along anything.
Success in an examination or similar test.
Permission or license to pass, or to go and come.
An intentional walk.
The area in a restaurant kitchen where the finished dishes are passed from the chefs to the waiting staff.
A sexual advance.
An attempt.
A run through a document as part of a translation, compilation or reformatting process.
A document granting permission to pass or to go and come; a passport; a ticket permitting free transit or admission
The act of moving the ball or puck from one player to another.
A single passage of a tool over something, or of something over a tool.
A passing of two trains in the same direction on a single track, when one is put into a siding to let the other overtake it.
A channel connecting a river or body of water to the sea, for example at the mouth (delta) of a river.
The act of overtaking; an overtaking manoeuvre.
The state of things; condition; predicament; impasse.
An opening, road, or track, available for passing; especially, one through or over some dangerous or otherwise impracticable barrier such as a mountain range; a passageway; a defile; a ford.
A password (especially one for a restricted-access website).
A thrust or push; an attempt to stab or strike an adversary.
A thrust; a sally of wit.
An act of declining to play one's turn in a game, often by saying the word "pass".
Used to give advice or opinion that an action is, or would have been, beneficial or desirable.
Will be likely to (become or do something); indicates a degree of possibility or probability that the stated thing will happen or be true in the future.
Indicates that something is expected to have happened or to be the case now.
Used to express a conditional outcome.
With verbs such as 'see' or 'hear', usually in the second person, used to point out something remarkable in either a good or bad way.
To make a statement of what ought to be true, as opposed to reality.
Used to impart a tentative, conjectural or polite nuance.
Used to express what the speaker would do in another person's situation, as a means of giving a suggestion or recommendation.
Simple past tense of shall.
In questions, asks what is correct, proper, desirable, etc.
Used to issue an instruction (traditionally seen as carrying less force of authority than alternatives such as 'shall' or 'must').
Used to form a variant of the present subjunctive, expressing a state or action that is hypothetical, potential, mandated, etc.
Something that ought to be the case as opposed to already being the case.