| 释义 | pastadj.n.Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: English past.Etymology:  <  past, past participle of pass v.   With use as adjective, compare classical Latin praeteritus  preterite adj.   With use as noun, compare Middle French, French passé   (use as noun of past participle of passer  pass v.) times gone by, events which have happened in the past (a1500), past tense (1550). Compare passed n., passed adj.In branch  A. I.   originally the perfect tense of pass v.   (compare sense  11b   at that entry), formed, as in other verbs of motion, with be   instead of have   (compare be v. 16b); the perfect is attested slightly earlier than other tenses of the verb in this use. The form passed is occasionally used in modern English verse as a disyllable. A. adj. I.  Predicatively after be . c1300    St. Brendan 		(Harl.)	 211 in  C. Horstmann  		(1887)	 225 (MED)  				Tuelf-monþ hit [is] ipassed nou þat ȝe gonne out wende. a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden  		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1882)	 VIII. 59  				When þe ȝere were i-passed, he sent to Rome. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Trin. Cambr.)	 		(1887)	 App. XX. 876 (MED)  				Of grace twelf hundred & sixtene þer to ȝeres were ipassed ar þis were ido. c1400						 (c1378)						    W. Langland  		(Laud 581)	 		(1869)	 B.  xviii. 133 (MED)  				Sith þis barn was bore, ben xxxti wynter passed. a1425						 (c1395)						     		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 Job xvii. 11  				Mi daies ben passid. a1500						 (?c1400)						     		(Cambr.)	 		(1937)	 799 (MED)  				The nyȝt was paste, þe day was come. 1526     Rom. iii. 25  				He forgeveth the synnes thatt are passed [mispr. passhed]. c1540						 (?a1400)						     10133  				When paste was the pes, parties were gedirt ffro the tenttes & the toun. 1593    W. Shakespeare  sig. D  				My dayes delight is past, my horse is  gone.       View more context for this quotation 1611     1 Sam. xv. 32  				Agag said, Surely the bitternesse of death is past .       View more context for this quotation 1785    W. Cowper   i. 639  				The dream is past; and thou hast found again Thy..homestall thatched with leaves. 1842    Ld. Tennyson Vision of Sin in   		(new ed.)	 II. 216  				What! the flower of life is past. 1894    W. Archer  224  				The time is past for the elementary Manicheism on which The Tempter is based. 1900    W. Robinson  		(ed. 8)	 516/1  				The old Mezereon.., whose leafless branches are often wreathed with fragrant blossoms before winter is past. 1937     Apr. 130/3  				Each spring, when danger of frost is past, I set the plants in a semi-shady spot in the garden. 1992     Mar. 34/1  				Dahlias should not be planted out until all danger of night frost is past. 2001     28 Aug. 12/3  				This is the week when the holiday season is past.  II.  As postmodifier (originally the past participle of pass v.  in a non-finite clause) and attributive . the world > time > relative time > the past > 			[adjective]		 the world > time > relative time > the past > 			[adjective]		 > just passed the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > end or conclusion > 			[adjective]		 > come or brought to an endβ. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Vesp.)	 12125 (MED)  				Wat i wel..þe time past.?a1475     		(1922)	 62  				Fro perellys past, present, and future.a1500						 (    J. Yonge tr.   		(Rawl.)	 		(1898)	 166 (MED)  				Reproue me not of trespasis y-Paste.1530    J. Palsgrave  Introd. 32  				The thre generall distinctions of tyme, present, parfytly past, and to come.1585    T. Washington tr.  N. de Nicolay   i. viii. 8 b  				[The city] in times paste was by the Emperours of Rome honoured.1623    J. Webster   iii. ii. sig. G4  				Past sorrowes, let vs moderately lament them.a1678    A. Marvell Death Cromwell in   		(1681)	 143  				Determine now his fatall Hour, Which, since they might not hinder, yet they cast To choose it worthy of his Glories past.1722    D. Defoe  356  				I was cover'd with Shame and Tears for things past, and yet had at the same time a secret surprizing Joy at the Prospect of being a true Penitent.1781    W. Cowper  491  				Past indiscretion is a venial crime.1833    C. Williams  vii. 124  				When I look back upon my past life it looks dreary.1875    B. Jowett tr.  Plato  		(ed. 2)	 III. 266  				A narration of events, either past, present, or to come.1906    J. London   iv. vi. 251  				In past experience, especially in dealing with squaws, meat and punishment had often been disastrously related.1965    N. Mandela  i. 29  				No careful examinations were made of their past history and political characteristics.2003     		(Nexis)	 20 June (Weekend section) 13  				The Carrie-Jack relationship doesn't have the spark of her past loves.α.  1340     		(1866)	 59  				On is preterit..of þinge ypassed. a1393    J. Gower  		(Fairf.)	 Prol. 55  				Long tyme in olde daies passed. a1425						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer  		(1987)	  iii. 1407  				For to recoveren blisse and ben at eise, And passed wo with joie contrepeise. a1500						 (    J. Yonge tr.   		(Rawl.)	 		(1898)	 157 (MED)  				Who-so nothynge thynkyth of thyngis y-passet, a sote and a fole he shall be callid. 1569    R. Grafton  II. 761  				Things passed cannot be called agayne. 1586    A. Day  xi. 246  				Who..will in no wise be intreated so muche as to looke backe on my passed euilles. 1678    I. Walton  53  				This Relation of my pass'd thoughts. a1740    J. Brereton To Nehemiah Griffin in   		(1744)	 28  				You..our pass'd Woes relate. 1781    W. Cowper  256  				While danger passed is turned to present joy. a1821    J. Keats Stanzas in   		(1829)	 19 Sept. 618/3  				But were there ever any Writhed not at passed joy? 1880    W. Watson  10  				His Passèd summers told beyond a score. 3. c1400						 (?a1387)						    W. Langland  		(Huntington HM 137)	 		(1873)	 C.  xvii. 368  				As ich tolde þe..a lytel tyme passed. 1444     V. 117/2  				As thay used to bye hem a xx or xxx yere past. 1515    Bp. West in  H. Ellis  		(1846)	 3rd Ser. I. 182  				He that in a lytell tyme past myght spend a hundreth poundes by yere, may nott att thys day spend xxti. 1566    in  E. Peacock  		(1866)	 45  				Item an Idoll of all halowes—cut in peces by Mr. william ffearnes a year past. 1626    D. Skinner Let. 27 Oct. in  W. D. Hamilton  		(1859)	 131  				I am tould that the Marquise Spinola is 2 dayes past come to Dunkerke in person. 1654    W. Sclater, Jr.  Ep. Ded. sig. A2  				Above twenty years last past..you erected, and ever since continued, at your own proper cost, an Arabick Lecture. 1722    E. Thomas  20  				But now twelve Cent'ries past, I've cause to mourn To see my Virgil's Works thus maul'd and torn. 1790     153  				Some numbers past it was announced in this publication, that [etc.]. 1830    E. B. Pusey   ii. 135  				According to a plan prescribed a hundred or more years past. 1889    ‘M. Twain’  xix. 234  				Now ye shall wit that that very duke and his six sons are they whom but few days past you also did overcome and send to Arthur's court! 1931    E. Ferber  x. 211  				There's the tenant house, empty these years past. 1980    W. Valgardson  vii. 75  				Close to the river a broad swathe of land had been cleared some years past, then allowed to grow over. 1994     Feb. 56/3  				My own shop teacher from twenty years past was Mr. Talania. 2000    A. Ghosh  		(2001)	 ii. 22  				The expeditions that had been sent into the Shan highlands in years past.the world > time > relative time > the past > 			[adjective]		 > just passed > of time or order?c1425    tr.  Guy de Chauliac  		(Paris)	 		(1971)	 117  				The firste [process] is fulfilled by þe forsaide gouernaunce in þe chapitles last passed [?a1425 N.Y. Acad. Med. next passed; L. proxime preteritis]. c1429     		(1986)	 l. 4305  				The passid chapitle shewed vs the last examynacioune. 1476    in  E. Hobhouse  		(1890)	 5 (MED)  				Comes the Wardence and bryng in a bille of their cost done the yere past..xxxiij s. vij d. 1588    R. Parke tr.  J. G. de Mendoza  176  				Of whom wee made mention in the Chapter past. 1665    R. Boyle Disc.  iv. v, in   sig. F6  				If you should imagine, that in the pass'd Discourse I have [etc.]. 1685    H. Crispe in  A. Behn et al.   38  				She'l sweeten all the cares of the past day at night. 1714    J. Ayliffe  II.  iii. i. 133  				The Vice-Chancellor closes the Act in a solemn speech; wherein it is usual for him to commemorate the Transactions of the Year past, and especially such Benefactions as have been given to the University. 1764    T. Legg  		(ed. 3)	 40  				Journeymen Bakers..are casting up what Dead-Men they cheated their Masters of the past Week. 1803     I. xv. 241  				On the past day Adelfrid..had departed into Deïri. 1891    T. Hardy  I. xii. 156  				I have walked hundreds of miles during this past summer. 1909    R. Kipling  		(1910)	 258  				I had spent the week past among our plague~stricken. 1933     15 Mar. 15/2  				During the past week the Nazi steam-roller has passed over every one of the seventeen Federal States of the Reich. 1970     24 Sept. 1/1  				The number of family units on the welfare rolls has more than doubled in the past year. 2000     Dec. 38/4  				There has also appeared during the past year a novel about Vermeer—The Girl with the Pearl Earring.the world > time > relative time > the past > 			[adjective]		 > just passed > preceding this or the last (day, etc.)a1500     		(Trin. Cambr.)	 6182 (MED)  				The tewisday passed Aforne penticost..Thys full goodly knyght yild tho vp his goste. 1821    J. Clare  II. 88  				It seems but Sunday past Since we went out together for the last. 1875    L. Larcom  xi. 150  				Everything Ruth had to tell was of the Monday past. 1988    A. Warner  142  				The barman pointed to a space by the window... He goes, It was there till Saturday past. 1999    R. L. Melammed  iii. 57  				She had observed these practices for about nine years but had discontinued as of Easter past.1604    in  J. Stuart  		(1848)	 II. 256  				To pay..the soume of four pundis, for the proffitt of the said soume for the half-yeir past. 1657    A. Sparrow  		(1661)	 50  				These..have been viewed and allowed by the Church..for many ages past. 1732    G. Berkeley  I.  i. i. 3  				For several Months past I have enjoy'd such Liberty. 1756    T. Amory  I. 411  				He has been for a year and a half last past in Italy. 1803     10 212  				Drier..than it has been for some years past. 1894    G. Moore  179  				Esther admitted that she had for some time past neglected her religion. 1934    J. Joyce  13 Aug. 		(1966)	 III. 317  				I have a fit of ague for the past 24 hours... O Lord, the one day I feel so shivery~shaky! 1991    S. Hill  viii. 164  				Georgiana opened the doors of the window that let onto the garden and went out, lighter of heart than for weeks past. 1993    P. Ackroyd  35  				Ferdinand Griffen..had for many years past been buried deep in his rare studies.the world > time > period > a month or calendar month > 			[adjective]		 > of last month1666    W. Temple  6 Mar. 		(1700)	 I. 33  				In your Lordship's of the 21st past, I find not the least Mention of any Letters received from me. 1678    Ld. Conway Let. 30 Oct. in  M. H. Nicolson  		(1992)	 vii. 443  				I receaved Monsieur Van Helmonts Letter of the 5th past with yours enclos'd to my Brother Rawdon. 1702     No. 3858/4  				A Watch..was dropt the 14th past near Goodman Peacock's Farm. 1766    Ld. Chesterfield  14 Aug. 		(1932)	 		(modernized text)	 VI. 2755  				I received yesterday your letter of the 30th past. 1789    B. Franklin Let. 3 Aug. in   1170  				Dear Sister, I have receiv'd your kind Letter of the 23rd past. the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > tense > 			[noun]		 > past the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > tense > 			[adjective]		 > past1729    T. Cooke  204  				I am certain that the passed Tenses of sit and see, which are sat and saw, will not be well sounding if this Rule is observed. 1753    J. Bevis  10  				The past tense generally ends in -ed as, I danced. 1823    Ld. Byron  xl. 75  				The past tense, The dreary ‘Fuimus’ of all things human. 1904    C. T. Onions  §118  				In the earlier period of Old English..the Past tense form had the meanings of the Past, Past Imperfect, Present Perfect, and Pluperfect of Latin. 1976    H. MacInnes  xxviii. 286  				No need to think anything. It's all past tense now. 1990     Dec. 67/2  				If it snowed at Christmas, we'd make a snowman... It is a past form of the first conditional. (It did not always snow, but when it did, we made a snowman.) 2002     11 Feb.  ii. 31/4  				A few of Margaret's close friends [were filmed], all speaking of her in the past tense.the world > time > relative time > the past > antecedence or being earlier > 			[adjective]		 > former (of persons)1915    W. S. Maugham  x. 34  				Its [sc. the school's] headmaster was an honorary Canon, and a past headmaster was the Archdeacon. 1930     16 Aug. 10/3  				The Brewers' Society, of which I am a past-Chairman and a member of the Committee, has already expressed its considered views, through its accredited representatives. 1983    W. N. Rowe  xii. 171  				To prevent the law from falling into disrepute..is the bounden duty of one who is a King's Counsellor, a Master of the Supreme Court, and a past Treasurer of the Law Society. 1992     Dec. 24/2  				Mr. Reg Stevenson, a past commodore of the Royal St. Lawrence Yacht Club.  B. n. 1.  Chiefly with the . the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > 			[phrase]		 > that which is old-fashioned or obsoletea1500    tr.  A. Chartier  		(Rawl.)	 		(1974)	 120 (MED)  				Passid [Fr. le passé] is now taken from theim and to come thei abide for to come. c1530    W. Walter  sig. Biii  				Loue hath the made for to be agast That wysedome and vertue is clerely from the past. 1609    W. Shakespeare  cxxiii. sig. H2v  				Not wondring at the present, nor the past .       View more context for this quotation a1678    A. Marvell Poem upon Death O. C. 285 in   		(1681)	 151  				As long as future time succeeds the past, Always thy honour, praise and name shall last. 1739    D. Hume  I.  iii. 239  				An experiment in the past proves at least a possibility for the future. 1743    A. Pope  		(new ed.)	  ii. 52  				Then see how little the remaining sum, Which serv'd the past, and must the times to come. 1817    Ld. Byron   i. i. 14  				We are eternal; and to us the past Is, as the future, present. 1850     July 1/2 449  				The Republic of Liberia, like Hayti, would soon be a thing of the past. 1871    S. Smiles  vii. 201  				Men of a comparatively remote past. 1914    E. R. Burroughs  xviii. 248  				He had been too preoccupied with his own scholarly thoughts in the past. 1977    C. Allen  i. 21/2  				By the 1880s the discomfort of travelling by palkee (palanquin)..was already becoming a thing of the past. 2002     Feb. 20/3  				The U.S. shows no sign of reinstituting the extremely restrictive immigration laws of the past.the world > time > relative time > the past > 			[noun]		 the world > time > relative time > the past > 			[noun]		 > that which happened in the past1589    G. Puttenham   iii. xix. 205  				In matter of counsell or perswasion we..doe compare the past with the present, gathering probabilitie of like successe to come in the things wee haue presently in hand. 1651    T. Hobbes   i. ii. 3  				After great distance of time, our imagination of the Past is weak; and wee lose (for example) of Cities wee have seen, many particular Streets. 1665    G. Thomson 		(title)	  				Λοιμοτομια; or the Pest Anatomized. 1703    M. Chudleigh  3  				All was forgot, as if in Lethe's Stream I'd quench my Thirst, the past was all a Dream. 1792    C. Smith  II. 254  				The present suspence, dreadful as it is, has given her leave to look back on the past. 1811    W. R. Spencer  7  				Oh, Mother! past is past! 'tis o'er. 1892    B. F. Westcott  18  				No repentance on earth can undo the past. 1924    J. Galsworthy   i. i. 1  				His lively, twisting mind, embedded in deposits of the past, sceptical of the present. 1960    C. Day Lewis  i. 18  				When I was younger, in revolt against ‘the family’ and society in general, I wished to travel light, unencumbered by the past. 1996    I. Donnachie  et al.   103  				Those characters who are trying to maintain the status quo and forget the past.1812     Nov. 117  				The Romans had begun already to live in the past, and to make pensive reflections on the faded glory of mankind. 1862    W. Collins  II.  iv. xi. 348  				Still she sat, tearless and quiet, dead to the present and the future, living in the past. 1872    C. D. Warner  92  				The city lives in the past still, and on its memories, keeping its old walls and moat entire. 1905    Baroness Orczy  xvi  				The present is not so glorious but that I should not wish to dwell a little in the past. 1926    J. Galsworthy   iii. v. 250  				He lived for a cosey moment in the past again, as might some retired old cricketer taking block once more. 1967     113 176/1  				What is usually termed ‘living in the past’ develops and various manifestations of wishful thinking occur. 1990    J. Francome  155  				The idea that she should risk her future by dwelling in the past, raking over the cooling embers of his life in order to discover who killed him and why would have enraged him. 2003     		(Nexis)	 8 Sept.  b5  				Anybody who thinks it's easy to work your way through college these days is living in the past.a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. i. 258  				An act Whereof, what's past is Prologue; what to come In yours, and my  discharge.       View more context for this quotation]			 1943     July 82/2  				The past is prologue, the present is calamity, and the future will take care of itself. 1959    C. Ellis in  J. King  Introd. p. viii  				Nothing could demonstrate that the ‘Past is Prologue’ better than a ruling of the Comptroller General of the United States in this year of 1958. For that ruling is merely a reiteration of the arguments of the special interests which [etc.]. 1962     16 Feb. 11/5  				The past was a prologue and it gave a sense of confidence in the future, Mr. Kennedy said. 1975     		(Nexis)	 17 Feb. (Internat. Business section) 38  				The past is by no means prologue in the auto industry, but many car makers see continued hard times. 2003     7 Aug. (Loudoun Extra)  t2  				If past is prologue, these are the identical purveyors of distrust who invited farmers and other landowners of western Loudoun..to similar ‘land-use friendly’ meetings and then ignored their pleas. the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > tense > 			[noun]		 > past1783    H. Blair  I. ix. 162  				An aörist, or indefinite past. 1845    J. Stoddart Gram. in   		(1847)	 I. 57/1  				The present imperfect implies something of the past, and something of the future. 1876    C. C. Robinson  p. xlii  				Think..(Thuongk) The last form is less employed participially than in the past, in which tense it is of constant occurrence. 1927    E. A. Sonnenschein  §108  				The meaning of simple priority to the time of speaking is expressed..in English by the Past. 1959    I. Gershwin  343  				‘Got’ as the past of ‘get’ generally means ‘acquired’ or ‘achieved’. 1991     66 296  				These percentages of the simple verb form in the past were much lower than those for the simple present.the world > life > source or principle of life > age > 			[noun]		 > period or stage of life > specific1827    Ld. Byron   i. ii. 25  				In another day What is shall be the past of Belus' race. 1836    J. H. Newman  		(1837)	 III. xxii. 366  				Is it never maintained, that a Christian Minister is off his past? 1890    R. Kipling in   July 28  				The Lords of Life and Death would never allow Charlie Mears to speak with full knowledge of his pasts. 1919    J. Conrad   iv. i  				I had an idea that he had had a lurid past and had seen some fighting in his youth. 1961    F. Leiber  vii. 57  				It's sweet to jigger reality, to twist the whole course of a man's life or a culture's, to ink out his or its past and scribble in a new one. 2002    C. M. Byron  viii. 115  				Her past wasn't exactly convent white. She'd been married three times, and..romantically linked with a range of celebs.Compounds C1.   General attributive . 1939    S. Spender  24  				In the past-coloured pigment of the mind's eye They feed and fly and dwell.1939    L. MacNeice  18  				The final cure is not in his past-dissecting fingers.1762    L. Sterne  VI. xxi. 89  				Chatting..upon past-done deeds. 1822    C. Lloyd   iii. i. 136  				I see his spirit has its..reveries Of past-done things.  C2.  1912     2 282  				The Committee's recommendation was to call this tense past continuous or imperfect. 1924     24 23  				In all Dinka tenses, except the Pres. Continuous and Past Continuous, the Direct Object..is placed between the tense particle and the verb root. 1952     36 280/2  				In this sentence tenía expresses a past continuous condition. 1999    W. Soyinka   ii. 132  				He wrote of Egyptian glory, the pyramids and the sphinxes from which the black American glimpsed a vanished nobility, but in the African past continuous, especially the cultural, he seemed blissfully disinterested.the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > tense > 			[adjective]		 > other specific tenses1904     25 443  				As a past-future, or, more precisely, a past-future-perfect, it is necessarily subjunctive. 1961    R. B. Long  v. 127  				Progressive-aspect forms..sometimes emphasize..in past-perfect and past-future tenses closeness to a past time that is central in the attention at the moment. 2001     		(Nexis)	 12 79  				We see the temporal logic of the past future at work in his thinking of the potential transcendence of the face-to-face relation.1923     38 179  				The treatment of the regular conjugations is in the main like that of other books, with a break from the old tense names..to the newer..terminology of Past Descriptive.., Past Historic, etc. 1958    J. Wilson  v. 56  				The Christian belief in the Creation, as expressed in the statement ‘God made the world’... We treat the statement as referring to an event, assuming ‘made’ to be used, as normally, in the past historic tense. 1977    C. K. Stead in  J. Pilditch  		(1996)	  iv. 163  				Its tense is almost exclusively past historic which, because it makes each action finite and exclusive, is hardly different in effect from present tense narration. 1999    M. Hawcroft  iv. 105  				The imperfect tense perhaps suggests that the pleasures are not necessarily over for good in the way that the past historic would have done.1758    J. Ward  iv. 99  				The past imperfect tense is formed of the auxiliary verb did and the theme, or of the auxiliary verb was and the present participle; and denotes an action as doing at some past time. 1770    I. Hodgson  69  				These Times may be subdivided into imperfect and perfect, viz...the Past imperfect, as I loved, was loving, or did love. 1839     XIII. 314/1  				The past-imperfect and aorist tenses of the Greek verb. 1844    T. H. Key  124  				It seems not improbable that the past imperfects of the Latin language have for their suffix..a past tense of habeo formed upon the model of era-m. 1904    C. T. Onions  §118  				In the earlier period of Old English..the Past tense form had the meanings of the Past, Past Imperfect, Present Perfect, and Pluperfect of Latin. 1978     5 384  				According to Clay, gabasik is the third-person singular, past-imperfect form of -vasik. 2014     98 1054/1  				Laval focuses on transfer-of-training effects, namely the ability to improve in French subjunctive as a result of training on the French past imperfect.the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > a part of speech > verb > 			[adjective]		 > participial > past1881     2 294  				An example of the past-participial infinitive. 1961    R. B. Long  xviii. 406  				Latin past-participial stems are commonly marked..by the use of either the letter t or the letter s. 2002     		(Nexis)	 21 Dec. 13  				Nativity comes into English from the Latin verb nasci, ‘to be born’. Its past participial stem gives us the core of the word ‘nation’.the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > a part of speech > verb > 			[noun]		 > participle > types of1798    J. H. Tooke  		(ed. 2)	 I. viii. 263  				The adjective Less and the comparative Less are the imperative..; and the superlative Least is the past participle. 1870    F. Hall  137  				[Karnâ], following an uninflected past participle, forms a frequentative. 1937     36 474  				The strong vowel is divided into classes..according to the vowel of the past and ignoring the past participle vowel. 2002     		(Nexis)	 13 Dec. 22  				A verb has three principal parts: the base form, the simple past, and the past participle.the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > tense > 			[adjective]		 > past > with specific aspect1868    S. Kerl  133  				The subjunctive mood has three tenses: the present, the past, and the past-perfect. 1889     23 Nov. 343  				The form ‘scripsi’, the traditional ‘past-perfect’, was now called ‘present perfect’; ‘scripseram’ was called past-perfect. 1989     3 15/1  				Another..change that seems to be taking place in American English these days is the gradual abandonment of the past perfect (pluperfect) tense.society > authority > control > person in control > 			[noun]		 > one who presides > over an institution or society > past1859     Mar. 556/2  				Any past President of the United States. 1903     12 Feb. 348/2  				James Glaisher..was also a past-president of the Royal Meteorological Society. 2000     18 May 20/1  				Saxon is an activist for the Design Build Foundation and is a past president of the British Council for Offices.1899     15 Mar. 6/1  				There will be no valuation or past profit statement. 2002     		(Nexis)	 13 Dec. 55  				This would put Omnia on a 4p:e and 10,8% dividend yield which, despite past profit volatility, adds up to solid value.1870    E. H. Magill   iii. 400  				The e mute counts for nothing in the measure in the verbal ending aient in the past progressive and conditional. 1874    J. Mulligan  iii. 95  				The compound tense, expressive of past progressive action, which usually represents the imperfect of other languages, cannot be properly used here. 1935     19 248  				Although for pedagogical reasons a separate rule for the past progressive function might be retained, the above [rule] would..also cover this use, for the past progressive always implies simultaneity of at least two past events or conditions. 2001     		(Nexis)	 44  				The use of past progressive forms in past tense contexts cannot be regarded as incorrect... The present tense form of the auxiliary is used for present progressive and the imperfect form of the auxiliary is used for past progressive.the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > 			[adjective]		 > old-fashioned or antiquated1889    J. J. Hissey  89  				These past-time inns..how they delight the eye of the nineteenth century traveller. 1996     80 271/1  				Painting a verbal picture of past-time events and feelings.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).pastprep.adv.Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: English past  , pass v.Etymology:  <  past, past participle of pass v. With sense  A. 1a   compare Old French, French passé beyond in time, after (12th cent. in Old French in isolated use; subsequently from the 17th cent.).In prepositional use probably arising out of the perfect tense of transitive uses of pass v. 1b,   2,   10a,   12 s.v.), formed with be   instead of have   (compare be v. 16b); be was frequently used as the auxiliary of the perfect tense even when the verb was transitive, as in the examples given below. In such cases it is possible to substitute for the past participle the preposition beyond (as expressing the result of passing); whence it was natural to treat past as = ‘beyond’ in other contexts.c1300    St. Christopher 		(Harl.)	 52 in  F. J. Furnivall Early Eng. Poems & Lives Saints 		(1862)	 61  				Þo he þe croice ipassed was, he tournde aȝe to þe clene.				        ▸				    a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1879)	 VII. 487  				Whanne þey were unneþes i-passed A reden [v.r. reedy] marys..þe eorle of Chestre spak to his men.c1400    Life St. Alexius 		(Laud 622)	 		(1878)	 283  				Þe Cee of grece passed he is.a1500						 (a1460)						    Towneley Plays 		(1897–1973)	 90  				I am old..passed I am all preuay play.1600    Abp. G. Abbot Expos. Prophet Ionah xiii. 273  				Ionas was passed the pikes, and now entering vpon a victory, when [etc.]. A. prep. 1. c1300     		(Laud Misc. 108)	 		(1889)	 43 (MED)  				I scholde have ben dumb as a schep..Slayn and passid al his pin. c1395    G. Chaucer  1476  				The day is short, and it is passed [v.r. passede] pryme. c1449    R. Pecock  		(1860)	 149  				Aftir that the man is come into ȝeeris of discrecioun and is passid childhode. ?a1475						 (?a1425)						    tr.  R. Higden  		(Harl. 2261)	 		(1876)	 VI. 343  				Noon of theym lyvede passede [a1387 J. Trevisa tr. v.r. over] oon yere. 1509    S. Hawes  		(de Worde)	 xxvii. sig. O.iii  				I thought me past all chyldly ygnoraunce. 1526     Heb. xi. 11  				Sara..was delivered of a childe when she was past age. 1574    J. Baret  P 141  				Olde howndes past hunting. 1574    J. Baret  P 154  				A disease Past the worst; drawing to an end. 1613    S. Purchas  119  				When it was halfe an houre past the sixt houre. 1655    T. Fuller   x. 65  				Children not yet come to, and Old men already past helping of themselves. 1709    T. Hearne  		(1886)	 II. 309  				After he was past the Age of one hundred Years. 1749    J. Cleland  I. 6  				My education, till past fourteen, was no better than very vulgar; reading, or rather spelling, an illegible scrawl. 1768    H. Brooke  III. xvi. 134  				This horse is quite passed mark of mouth. 1847    C. Brontë  I. ii. 19  				It was past four o'clock, and the beclouded afternoon was tending to drear twilight. 1885     28 May 833/2  				Dancing was kept up till past two. 1955    J. Cheever  		(1991)	 50  				Thunderstorms in the night and at half past three a settled rain. 1999    A. Wheatle  66  				Juliet glanced at her gold-coloured watch, noting that the time was past ten o'clock.1542    in  J. Stuart  		(1844)	 I. 439  				Vsit and perseruit all tymes bigane, past memor of man. 1575    in  J. H. Burton  		(1878)	 1st Ser. II. 472  				[This] hes bene in use..within the said Burgh past memor of man.1559    P. Morwyng tr.  C. Gesner  115  				Geue it to be drunken fasting, if the disease be hot, with wine: and if the man be past .xxiiii. yeres of age [L. si homo excesserit annum uigesimum quartum] geue it him with Aqua vite. 1590    R. Hakluyt tr.  T. de Bry True Pictures People Virginia in  T. Hariot  		(new ed.)	 45  				After they be once past 10. yeares of age, they wear deer skinnes as the older sorte do. 1612    W. Symonds Proc. Eng. Colonie Virginia xi. 103 in  J. Smith   				Pocahontas, Powhatans daughter..was the very nomparell of his kingdome, & at most not past 13 or 14 yeares of age. 1676     No. 1153/4  				A light gray Gelding..five years old past. 1720     No. 5898/9  				Lost.., a black Mare,..aged three Years past. 1767    Bp. W. Warburton  		(1809)	 406  				His being able, at past eighty, to perform this expedition on foot. 1835    S. S. Arnold in   		(1940)	 8 120  				This morning my white mare died, being 8 years old past, for which I gave $100 at five years past. 1894    ‘M. Twain’  xii. 157  				He and Driscoll were of the same age—a year or two past sixty. 1904    J. Thorington  		(ed. 3)	 ix. 235  				The [manifest] method by which the eyes of patients past forty-five years of age are refracted. 1967    M. Forster   i. v. 98  				In Maudie's opinion, no woman could get past forty and still have those needs. 1995     17 Mar. 63/1  				Nearly one fifth of Britain's population is past retirement age.  2. 1421    in  T. Rymer  		(1710)	 X. 163 (MED)  				Thay..be not payed of her Wages past xx or xxiv Francs..for the Month. c1450    King Ponthus 		(Digby)	 in   		(1897)	 12 114 (MED)  				The kyng..loked to the see..and sawe not past lx schippes. a1470    T. Malory  		(Winch. Coll.)	 130  				There was founde but lytyll paste two hondred men slayne. c1515    Ld. Berners tr.   		(1882–7)	 iv. 7  				They..departyd fro Parys without restynge past one night in a plase. 1589    G. Puttenham   iii. xviii. 158  				It was but a small trifle, not past sixteene shillings matter which he had taken. 1601    B. Jonson   i. iii. sig. C4v  				Faith I haue not past two shillings, or  so.       View more context for this quotation 1608    E. Topsell  213  				Theyr egges are not past so bigge as pease. 1668    C. Sedley Mulberry-garden  ii. i, in   		(1722)	 II. 22  				The Portion I can give with you does not deserve a Man of past half his Fortune. 1777    G. Colman   i. ii. 8  				I have a kinsman not past three quarters of a mile hence, unto whom I was going.   1910    P. W. Joyce  xiii. 300  				Our landlord's face we rarely see past once in seven years.1447    O. Bokenham  		(Arun.)	 		(1938)	 59  				Sche was wys, prudent & sage Past all the wommen off that cyte. 1594    G. Chapman  sig. Dv  				The thunder-louing Ioue In honors past all others showes his loue. ?1611    G. Chapman tr.  Homer   i. 7  				He, affects past all men height. 1791    W. Cowper tr.  Homer Odyssey in   II.  xxiv. 547  				But sight of those with wonder fill'd me most, So glorious past all others were the games By silver-footed Thetis giv'n for thee. 1818    J. Keats   iii. 114  				His own goddess was past all things fair. 1847    C. Brontë  III. x. 258  				He set store on her past everything.1551    R. Crowley  sig. Biiv  				But spent all..in rayment past your degree. 1598    G. Chapman  sig. Dv  				My husband is a Lord and past a Lord.1897    Bromyard Rec. 9 Dec. in   		(1903)	 IV. 433/1  				Fortunately, past a profusion of soot and water, no damage was done.  3. the mind > mental capacity > expectation > despair, hopelessness > desperate state or condition > beyond hope			[phrase]		1509    A. Barclay  		(Pynson)	 f. cliv  				Some ar so past shame in theyr langage So fowle and lothly, that [etc.]. 1534     Rom. xi. 33  				How vnserchable are his iudgementes and his wayes past findyng out. 1598    W. Shakespeare   ii. v. 192  				Nay, thats past praying for, I haue pepperd two of  them.       View more context for this quotation 1600    W. Shakespeare   iv. i. 203  				I haue had a dreame, past the wit of man, to say; what dreame it  was.       View more context for this quotation ?1614    G. Chapman tr.  Homer   v. 81  				She..again..diu'd past sight the Maine. a1661    T. Fuller  		(1662)	 Wales 11  				It is past my power to comprimise a difference betwixt two so great persons. a1734    R. North  		(1740)	  i. iii. §14. 131  				Which is a Sottise past all Belief. 1782    W. Cowper Mutual Forbearance in   25  				Well, I protest 'tis past all bearing. 1847    C. Brontë  II. i. 3  				‘I will put her to some test,’ thought I: ‘such absolute impenetrability is past comprehension.’ 1881    A. Trollope  III. lvii. 176  				His mother moaning and groaning over him as though he were sick almost past hope of recovery. 1909    R. Kipling  		(1910)	 46  				I've seen her walk to her own mirror by bye-ends, and the woman that cannot walk straight there is past praying for. 1916    ‘Taffrail’  viii. 142  				Most of the younger men were past caring whether it was Christmas or Easter. 1960    G. W. Target  		(1962)	 231  				‘Did she say anything else at all?’ he said. ‘This is getting past a joke.’ 2002     		(Nexis)	 12 Dec. 48  				A succession of German coaches have ignored him and he is long past caring.the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > 			[adjective]		 > insanity or madness > affected witha1470    T. Malory  		(Winch. Coll.)	 331  				And the more he loked on her, the more he brenned in love, that he passed hymself farre in his reson.]			 1576    G. Pettie  sig. Dv  				Beeinge quight past himselfe, with staringe lookes, with pale countenaunce, with fierie eyes, [etc.]. 1602    W. Watson  132  				He was so vexed, lacerated, and calumniated..that he became almost past himselfe. 1641     sig. B2  				Oftentimes in the midst of his pastimes, calling the Princesse to mind, he would as one past himselfe,..abandon the company of his most familiars.   1863    E. C. Gaskell  II. xii. 214  				Mother is so patient, it puts me past mysel', for I could fight wi' t' very walls I'm so mad wi' grieving. 1892    Ld. Tennyson   iv. i. 129  				You see he is past himself. What would you more? 1896    F. M. T. Palsgrave  35  				He's gone past hissel. 1996    C. I. Macafee  247/2  				Past yourself, beside yourself, distracted.?1611    G. Chapman tr.  Homer   ii. 24  				But Ioue hath..cast My life into debates, past end. 1618    G. Chapman tr.  Hesiod  180  				That man, put To his fit task, will see it done past talk With any fellow. 1868    W. Morris   ii. 561  				I..Am nowise God to give man bliss Past ending.the mind > mental capacity > expectation > expect			[verb (intransitive)]		 > not be surprised by1619    F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher   iii. sig. F1  				You are welcome Sir, I thinke, but if you be not, tis past me To make you so: for I am here a stranger, Greater then you. 1677    J. Dryden   v. i. 39  				Wilt thou forsake me, in distress, For that which now is past me to redress?   1859    G. Meredith Last Words Juggling Jerry in   3 Sept. 190/2  				It's past parsons to console us. 1870    G. M. Hopkins  		(1959)	 198  				Br. Yates gave me the following Irish expressions—I wouldn't put it past you or I wouldn't doubt you = It is just what I should expect of you. 1894    E. Œ. Somerville  & ‘M. Ross’  I. v. 63  				I wouldn't put it past Charlotte to be trying to ketch Mr. Dysart. 1929    W. Faulkner  251  				I'm not surprised though... I wouldn't put anything past you. 1976    M. Birmingham  ix. 159  				‘Do you think she could possibly consider killing justified for the sake of her deprived flock?’ ‘I wouldn't put it past her’. 1998    N. Jones  		(Mersey TV transmission script)	 		(O.E.D. Archive)	 Episode 256. 35  				Lewis: You don't think he set all that up? Ruth: I wouldn't put it past him.the world > life > death > dead person or the dead > 			[adjective]		 the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > 			[phrase]		 > old-fashioned or obsolete the world > action or operation > ability > inability > 			[adjective]		 > unable or incompetent > no longer competentc1635    Avaritia in   		(caption to plate)	  				Once turnd bawd, (as past it) and growne old, Her soule it selfe, shee Prostitutes to Gould. 1679    J. Fletcher  & F. Beaumont   i. i. 405  				The Duke he's old and past it, he would Never have brought such a plague upon the Land else. 1691    W. Mountfort   i. ii. 5  				Lads at 12 will begin to Whore and bear Drink.., and be past it at five and twenty. 1845    C. Dickens  iii. 121  				As I am now, there's nothing can be said for me or done for me. I'm past it. 1864    C. M. Yonge  II. xi. 197  				‘He is almost past it,’ said Tom, ‘but..he may be roused by my voice.’ 1928    E. Wallace  xv. 130  				He was a handy old chap—but he was getting rather past it. 1950    ‘J. Guthrie’  ii. 37  				One never dreamed of going to them for advice. The fact was they were past it; they had lived their lives. 1978     1 Dec. 1388/2  				Not for him the slumped envy of the past-it fantasizer. 1993    S. Stewart  xxi. 215  				I shall miss the boats, but they're gettin past it, and we're gettin past it. 2000    H. Simpson  		(2001)	 50  				The birthday cards had all been about being past it.  4. 1523    Ld. Berners tr.  J. Froissart  I. 154  				When he was past the ryver, he thanked God. 1597    W. Shakespeare   v. vi. 75  				My lord, the enemie is past the  marsh.       View more context for this quotation 1696    Let. in  J. Aubrey  		(1721)	 209  				E're we were two pair of Butts past the House. 1790    R. Burns Tam o' Shanter 91 in   		(1968)	 II. 560  				By this time he was cross the ford, And past the birks and meikle stane. 1854    H. D. Thoreau  157  				He was a great consumer of meat, usually carrying his dinner to his work a couple of miles past my house. 1870    W. Morris  507  				Let me speak to thee, If so it really is that thou art free, At peace and happy past the golden gate. 1900     Apr. 577  				Through the trees can be seen..the fjord,..as it stretches past headland and river-isle out to the sea. 1960    T. Hughes  57  				One jammed past its gills down the other's gullet. 2000     June (Mag. Suppl.) 5/3  				A short dirt road leads past the carpark for an enjoyable bushwalk to the caves.the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > movement over, across, through, or past > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > move past the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > movement over, across, through, or past > 			[preposition]		 > past the world > movement > rate of motion > move at specific rate			[verb (transitive)]		 > gain (ground) upon > catch up or overtake1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus  f. 137  				He..behelde hir after that she was gon past hym. ?1614    G. Chapman tr.  Homer   iii. 38  				Grave Nestor..flowes Past shore, in all experience. a1684    J. Evelyn  anno 1683 		(1955)	 IV. 321  				I turn'd my head the Contrary way til the Coach was gon past it. 1740    H. Bracken  		(ed. 2)	 II. vi. 167  				Altho' his Adversary's Horse make a Spring, and run past him. 1808    W. Scott   iii. xii. 144  				He drew his mantle past his face. 1857    T. Hughes   i. v. 109  				They're the bounds. As soon as the ball gets past them, it's in touch, and out of play. 1891    A. Conan Doyle  i  				He appeared to be in a great hurry..and brushed past the maid who opened the door with the air of a man who was thoroughly at home. 1929    E. Bowen  xv. 186  				She stared past Marda's shoulder into the darkness. 1971     July 14/2  				The..Singles..were won by Lady Ursula Abbey who just got past Mrs. Temple in a close and protracted final. 2000     Apr. 20/1  				An aluminium launch ran past us, ferrying more twitchers to the various hides perched high on the cliffs.  B. adv. (Usually with point of reference supplied by the context: past the speaker, or the person, point, or place spoken of.) the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > movement over, across, through, or past > 			[adverb]		 > past1790    A. Wilson  98  				While harsh, the huge Machine shot loud rethundering past. 1805    W. Wordsworth  32  				The sounding blast, That, if it could, would hurry past. 1854    H. D. Thoreau  279  				Wagons shot past with furious speed and crushing loads. 1884    W. C. Smith  43  				The tread of time as it hastens past. 1914    ‘B. L. Standish’ in   30 Sept. 138/1  				Courtney missed a hopper, though he almost fancied his bat lightly touched the whistling ball as it sped past. 1946    E. Bowen in   3 Jan. 14/1  				‘It's really quite creepy!’ she cried, as she pedalled past. 2000     Aug. 81/2  				Crouched and whimpering, I dry-retched in fear as bullets whizzed past.the mind > possession > supply > storage > store			[verb (transitive)]		 > reserve1847     8 377  				It is stacked past until the following year. 1894    W. G. Stevenson  iii. 65  				I'm prood to think ye're layin' past siller. 1937    in   		(1968)	 VII. 46/1  				The bundle was put past for Miss—who left us at the end of May. 1977     17 Jan. 5/7  				It means I'll have to..put the last increase in pension away every week to cover my own funeral, hoping that I'm spared until such times as I've got enough put past. 1996    C. I. Macafee  247/2  				Lay or put past, lay by, put aside..Have you any tobacco past?Compounds C1.   Chiefly poetic . Compounds of the preposition with object (cf. sense A. 3 ).  a.  a1586    Sir P. Sidney  		(1590)	  iii. viii. sig. Mm6  				Soroing not only his owne sorow, but the past-comfort sorow, which he fore-knew his mother would take.a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. i. 120  				To prostitute our past-cure malladie To  empericks.       View more context for this quotation a1888    P. J. Holdsworth in  D. B. W. Sladen  		(1888)	 241  				Consumed By pestilent Thirst, and past-cure maladies.1904     at Past prep & adv.  				Past-feeling.1631    G. Chapman   ii. i. sig. C 4v  				I be forc't To helpe my Countrey, when it forceth me To this past-helping pickle?1767    ‘Coriat Junior’  I. 332  				Enable me..to rejoice the past-hoping heart.1602    J. Davies  sig. A4v  				The Soule is such a precious thing, As cost the price of past-price deerest bloud.  b.  1553    T. Wilson   iii. f. 107  				The extreme wickednes of some pastgood roisters. a1881    S. Lamier  		(1908)	 8  				Cry good and past-good and most heavenly morrow, lord Sun. 1904     at Past prep. & adv.  				Past-good (whence past-good sb.).the mind > emotion > pride > impudence > 			[noun]		 > impudent person1553    R. Ascham Let. 24 Mar. in  H. Ellis  		(1843)	 15  				Thei judge bashfull men to be rude, and past-shames to be well manered. 1904     at Past prep. & adv.  				Past-shame [a.] (whence past-shame sb.).  c.  1876    F. W. Farrar  xiii. 124  				The past-feelingness of a miserable despair.1876    G. M. Hopkins Wreck of Deutschland xxxiii, in   		(1967)	 62  				A vein for the visiting of the past-prayer, pent in prison, The-last-breath penitent spirits.  C2.  society > trade and finance > management of money > insolvency > indebtedness > 			[adjective]		 > owed > overdue1896     		(European ed.)	 June 158/1  				I wrote out the past-due subscription bill. 1991     23 Nov. 140/2  				Several banks—including Hyundai's main bank, Korea Exchange Bank—moved to cut credit lines and collect past-due loans and interest. 2003     		(Nexis)	 27 June (Special section) 67 s  				We reached our yearly budget for past-due loans in just the first quarter of 2003.the world > time > relative time > the past > antecedence or being earlier > 			[adjective]		1784    R. Bage  I. 199  				When you reflect upon your past-gone occupation. 1821    C. Lloyd  192  				They dar'd not longer dwell In persevering in the past-gone scene.the world > the supernatural > deity > 			[adjective]		 > superhuman1614    J. Sylvester  1257  				Immortall Beauties of past-humane Soules.1898    G. Meredith  14  				Like dotage of the past-meridian dame For some bright Sungod adolescent.1823    J. Galt  II. xxviii. 268  				A man o' past-ordinar sense. 1826    J. Galt  xii. 113  				The Doctor is a past ordinar young man. 1996    C. I. Macafee  247/2  				Past ordinar,..exceptionally good or bad.the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > symptom > 			[noun]		 > specific result of diagnostic test1916     15 July 100/2  				Movement of the endolymph in the semicircular canals in a given direction, stimulates the sensitive hair cells in these canals, and produces definite phenomena. These phenomena are: 1, A twitching of the eyes or nystagmus of a certain type; 2, vertigo; 3, so-called ‘past pointing’; 4, falling reactions. 1934    R. R. Grinker  xiii. 372  				In cerebellar disturbances if a past pointing does occur it is outward, no matter where the lesion. 1999     120 117  				Romberg's and past-pointing tests were performed on children with otitis media with effusion and controls.1883    J. Greenwood  xxiv. 204  				These past-prime belles of the garden.the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[noun]		 > vastness of quantity or amount1609    W. Shakespeare   ii. ii. 28  				Will you with Compters summe, The past proportion of his infinite.a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  iv. iii. 158  				What a past-sauing slaue is  this?       View more context for this quotation1844    J. T. J. Hewlett  I. x. 207  				A past-the-middle-age college-bedmaker.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).<  adj.n.c1300  prep.adv.c1300 |