French word passe comes from Latin patior (I allow, acquiesce, submit.. I suffer, endure.), Proto-Indo-European *pent-, Old Latin mīlle passum, Proto-Indo-European *patno-
Dictionary entry | Language | Definition |
---|---|---|
patior | Latin (lat) | I allow, acquiesce, submit.. I suffer, endure. |
*pent- | Proto-Indo-European (ine-pro) | |
mīlle passum | Old Latin (itc-ola) | |
*patno- | Proto-Indo-European (ine-pro) | |
*patno | Latin (lat) | |
pando | Latin (lat) | I spread or open (out), extend. I spread out to dry. I unfold or expand. |
*passō | Vulgar Latin (la-vul) | |
passare | Vulgar Latin (la-vul) | |
*passare | Vulgar Latin (la-vul) | |
*passo | Latin (lat) | (Vulgar Latin) I pass. |
passare | Latin (lat) | |
*passāre | Vulgar Latin (la-vul) | |
passer | Old French (fro) | To pass; to pass by. |
passer | Middle French (frm) | To pass; to go by. |
passer | French (fra) | (TV) to show (be on television). (athletics) to pass (the relay baton). (card games) to pass (not play upon one's turn). (dated) (transitive) to pass (an exam or test). (intransitive) to pass (an exam or test). (intransitive) to pass, to go (between two entities). (legal) to pass. (music) to spin (e.g. a disk). (public transportation) to run. (reflexive) to take place, to happen, to come to [...] |
passe | French (fra) | (sports) pass. Pass (document allowing entry). Pass (passageway). Pass (the act of passing). |