different between passer vs paster
passer
English
Etymology
pass +? -er
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?p??s?(?)/
- (US) IPA(key): /?pæs??/
- Rhymes: -æs?(?)
Noun
passer (plural passers)
- One who succeeds in passing a test, etc.
- 2008, David L. Streiner, Geoffrey R. Norman, Health Measurement Scales
- The distributions of scores on the exam for passers and failers are plotted […]
- 2008, David L. Streiner, Geoffrey R. Norman, Health Measurement Scales
- One who passes something along; a distributor.
- a passer of counterfeit banknotes
- (sports) Someone who passes, someone who makes a pass.
- (American football) A football player who makes a forward pass, who may be (but not limited to) the quarterback.
- (chess) A passed pawn.
- (archaic) One who passes; a passer-by.
- 1904, National Magazine (volume 20, page 147)
- Passers stopped and began to stare. A policeman was approaching up the street. Dave dodged back into the cab and banged the door.
- 1904, National Magazine (volume 20, page 147)
- (sociology) One who is able to "pass", or be accepted as a member of a race, sex or other group to which society would not otherwise regard them as belonging.
Translations
See also
- passer-by
Anagrams
- Arpses, Aspers, Spears, Speras, aspers, parses, prases, presas, repass, sarpes, spares, sparse, spaser, spears
Danish
Etymology 1
From German Passer.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pas?r/, [?p?as?]
Noun
passer c (singular definite passeren, plural indefinite passere)
- compass, pair of compasses
- dividers
- calipers
Inflection
See also
- passer on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
Etymology 2
See passere (“to pass”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pase?r/, [p?a?se???]
Verb
passer or passér
- imperative of passere
Dutch
Etymology
From passen (“to measure a size”) +? -er.
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -?s?r
Noun
passer m (plural passers, diminutive passertje n)
- compass (device used with a pencil to draw an arc or circle on paper)
French
Etymology
From Middle French passer, from Old French passer, from Vulgar Latin *pass?, *pass?re, from Latin passus, past participle of pand? (“I stretch, I spread out”). Compare Italian passare, Spanish pasar, Portuguese passar.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p?.se/, /pa.se/
Verb
passer
- to go past
- to cross (a border)
- (law) to pass
- to spend (time)
- to publish (a newspaper)
- (transitive) to take, to sit (an exam or test)
- (intransitive) to pass (an exam or test)
- (dated) (transitive) to pass (an exam or test)
- (public transportation) to run
- to exceed (a limit)
- to percolate
- to hand down, to pass on
- to be allowed
- (intransitive) to pass, to go (between two entities)
- (transitive) to show (a movie)
- to go up (a grade)
- to shift (change gear)
- to go down
- to go up
- to stop by, to pop in
- to pass away, to die
- (music) to spin (e.g. a disk)
- (television) to show (be on television)
- (sports) to pass (kick, throw, hit etc. the ball to another player)
- (athletics) to pass (the relay baton)
- to pass on (infect someone else with a disease)
- (transitive) to put, to place, to slip (move a part of one's body somewhere else)
- 1908, Gaston Leroux, Le Mystère de la chambre jaune, 2009 edition, Wikisource, chapter 1:
- [...] et, par-dessus les volets, les barreaux intacts, des barreaux à travers lesquels vous n’auriez pas passé le bras…
- 1908, anonymous, Margaret Jull Costa (editor), The Mystery of the Yellow Room, 2003 edition (Dedalus, ?ISBN:
- [...] and, as well as those shutters, there were iron bars so close together that you could not even have got your arm through them.
- 1908, anonymous, Margaret Jull Costa (editor), The Mystery of the Yellow Room, 2003 edition (Dedalus, ?ISBN:
- [...] et, par-dessus les volets, les barreaux intacts, des barreaux à travers lesquels vous n’auriez pas passé le bras…
- 1908, Gaston Leroux, Le Mystère de la chambre jaune, 2009 edition, Wikisource, chapter 1:
- to wipe, rub
- to skip a go
- to put (make something undergo something)
- (card games) to pass (not play upon one's turn)
- (reflexive) to take place, to happen, to come to pass.
- (reflexive, for time) to go by
- (reflexive, with de) to do without
- to don
Usage notes
- This verb uses the auxiliary verb avoir when used transitively (or with a transitive sense, even when the complement is omitted); otherwise (when it is intransitive), it uses être.
Conjugation
Synonyms
- (reflexive, to happen): se produire, arriver
Derived terms
Descendants
- ? Alemannic German: passiere
- ? German: passieren
- ? Romanian: pasa
Further reading
- “passer” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Anagrams
- pressa
Ladin
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin *pass?, *pass?re, from Latin passus.
Verb
passer
- to proceed
Conjugation
- Ladin conjugation varies from one region to another. Hence, the following conjugation should be considered as typical, not as exhaustive.
Latin
Etymology
From Proto-Italic *passros, from Proto-Indo-European *p(e)t-tro-s (“who flies, bird”), from *peth?- (“to fly”). Related to penna.
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /?pas.ser/, [?päs???r]
- (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /?pas.ser/, [?p?s??r]
Noun
passer m (genitive passeris); third declension
- sparrow
- turbot
Declension
Third-declension noun.
Related terms
- passercula, passerculus
- passer?nus
Descendants
References
- passer in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- passer in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- passer in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
- De Vaan, Michiel (2008) Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, ?ISBN, page 449
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French passer.
Verb
passer
- to pass; to go by
Conjugation
- Middle French conjugation varies from one text to another. Hence, the following conjugation should be considered as typical, not as exhaustive.
Descendants
- French: passer
- ? Alemannic German: passiere
- ? German: passieren
- ? Romanian: pasa
References
- passer on Dictionnaire du Moyen Français (1330–1500) (in French)
Norwegian Bokmål
Verb
passer
- imperative of passere
- present of passe
Old French
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin *pass?, *pass?re, from Latin passus (“a step, pace, footstep, track”).
Verb
passer
- to pass; to pass by
Conjugation
This verb conjugates as a first-group verb ending in -er. The forms that would normally end in *-ss, *-sss, *-sst are modified to s, s, st. Old French conjugation varies significantly by date and by region. The following conjugation should be treated as a guide.
Descendants
- Middle French: passer
- French: passer
- ? Alemannic German: passiere
- ? German: passieren
- ? Romanian: pasa
- French: passer
- Norman: pâsser, pâssaïr
- ? Middle Dutch: passen
- Dutch: passen
- ? Middle English: passen
- English: pass
- Scots: pass
- ? Middle High German: passen
- German: passen
Further reading
- pass in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
passer From the web:
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paster
English
Etymology
paste +? -er
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -e?st?(r)
Noun
paster (plural pasters)
- One who, or that which, pastes.
- A slip of paper, usually bearing a name, intended to be pasted by the voter, as a substitute, over another name on a printed ballot.
Anagrams
- Pearts, paters, petars, prates, pretas, repast, repats, retaps, tapers, trapes, treaps
West Flemish
Etymology
From Middle Dutch past?or, from Latin p?stor. The West Flemish word has stress on the first syllable, like the Latin, but this is not clearly attested in Middle Dutch.
Noun
paster m (plural pasters)
- priest
paster From the web:
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