passed on

  • 11Passed —   Used to denote that a transaction has completed a stage of being processed by the automated system. For example the transaction has passed the staff shielding stage of fiating and is now going to be checked for sufficient funds …

    International financial encyclopaedia

  • 12passed, past, pass — Passed is the past tense of the verb pass; past is the past participle: The car passed us at 60 miles an hour. Your troubles are now past. Pass is not only a verb; it is also a noun. It appears in hackneyed phrases that are idiomatically sound… …

    Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • 13passed / past —    Passed is the past tense of pass, to go by or move ahead of: The boys passed through town quickly.    Past is a place in time that was before now: You would be wise to reflect on the past and learn from it …

    Confused words

  • 14passed / past —    Passed is the past tense of pass, to go by or move ahead of: The boys passed through town quickly.    Past is a place in time that was before now: You would be wise to reflect on the past and learn from it …

    Confused words

  • 15passed nem con — passed/​carried nem con phrase without anyone in a group disagreeing His proposal was passed nem con. Thesaurus: describing agreement and agreementssynonym Main entry: nem con …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 16passed away — index dead, deceased, defunct, lifeless (dead) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 17passed down — index hereditary Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 18passed him by — passed without stopping, walked near him …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 19passed ball — passed′ ball′ n. spo a pitched baseball that the catcher can reasonably be expected to catch but misses Compare wild pitch • Etymology: 1860–65 …

    From formal English to slang

  • 20passed ball — ☆ passed ball n. Baseball a misplay by the catcher in which a pitch that could be caught or controlled is missed and a base runner advances to another base as a result: cf. WILD PITCH …

    English World dictionary