Sinônimos
Examples for "pass"
Examples for "pass"
1Higher energy prices increase transport costs which farmers pass on to consumers.
2YOUR boarding pass contains far, far more information than you might think.
3The pass rate on the course so far is 80 per cent.
4UK police have said officers will pass the investigation to Spanish authorities.
5These people must pass certain background checks for possible past criminal convictions.
1The problem is when the memory lapse results in a serious outcome.
2Lockup commitments, typically of three years, begin to lapse later this year.
3However, if your relationship ends, your South African Spousal Permit will lapse.
4Domestic violence is not about anger or a temporary lapse of control.
5Why didn't things simply lapse back to the way they'd always been?
1The Houston story is too good to let it slip by undocumented.
2They cross the Channel in their fishing-boats and slip by the warships.
3I saw one slip by in the field, close to the road.
4West Point would frown on him for letting that one slip by.
5We watch the shoreline slip by as we near the harbor entrance.
1When he looked up again he saw Vaughan's cruiser glide by outside.
2Swans glide by with their signets, and we spot two flitting kingfishers.
3How fast the years glide by, beginning in hope and ending in disappointment!
4He whom your breath touches does not glide by the shelter of the bank.
5We sit and watch this shore as we glide by with a placid delight.
1A year ago, however, that name started to slip away from her.
2Gregor watched us to make sure we didn't try to slip away.
3At some point she felt Truitt slip away from her, lose consciousness.
4Funny, people were always warning Taylor not to let Baldwin slip away.
5She would not give up; would not let his life slip away.
1Good Heaven; I thought you had been let go by the surgeons.
2If new research is anything to go by then not so good.
3At present 80 per cent of Dubliners don't go by public transport.
4If the last year is anything to go by, neither much listened.
5You can travel north beyond the ice, if you go by water.
1So the years slide by into decades and still Galway wait on.
2Analysts expect prices to slide by another 10 percent by early next year.
3I let the obligatory 10 working days slide by and then emailed Comreg.
4It was never his nature to let an opportunity slide by.
5China saw investment banking fees slide by a quarter in 2011.
1Eisenhower at the summit: 'What U-Twos?' We'll go along; no preliminary summation.
2There are details we'll need to work out as we go along.
3Caveolinopathies often go along with increased CK levels indicative of sarcolemmal damage.
4Anybody interested in going to the tournament should go along, he said.
5It's a valid point and my thoughts go along the same lines.
1Two days must elapse before the steamer arrived; ample time for composition.
2After the elapse of nearly 14 years, could this be a record?
3In winter, months elapse without their seeing anybody from the outside world.
4Two years, as they say in the playbills, is supposed to elapse.
5An hour or two still had to elapse before the last scene.
6Still two or three days must elapse before they could reach Popayan.
7This satisfied us that hours might elapse before it was burned through.
8None the less, another six weeks were to elapse before hostilities began.
9An interval of some days must elapse before this could be done.
10Two years should elapse before sod land is used for this crop.
11Sometimes a week would elapse without his seeing his wife at all.
12Nine years were to elapse before he was to speak to her.
13An hour or two after a meal should be allowed to elapse.
14Having allowed half an hour to elapse, she dressed and walked shoreward.
15This portrait presupposes that a long period will elapse before Christ comes.
16At all events, some time must elapse before they can be here.
Sobre este termo
Verbo
Indicativo · Pretérito perfeito
Elapse nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América