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Example sentences for "pass from"

  • So at the base of ancient philosophy lies necessarily this postulate: that there is more in the motionless than in the moving, and that we pass from immutability to becoming by way of diminution or attenuation.

  • I find, first of all, that I pass from state to state.

  • But man is so constituted that he is ever impatient to pass from what is fanciful to what is common; and reflection must, therefore, have its place even in tragedy.

  • We pass from rest to activity, from emotion to indifference, from assent to contradiction, but we are always we ourselves, and what immediately springs from ourselves remains.

  • A to B and back in one-third the time required for it to pass from A to B and back in Fig.

  • So that to pass from node to node the impulse must pass up the pipe and down again.

  • A pulse will pass from A or A^1 to B and back again in half the time required to pass from A to B and back in Fig.

  • I failed in this, as the boxes are too well made to permit sound to pass from one to the other; but imagine my gratification to see Mr. Mitchel himself go into the box.

  • Being yourself, I anticipate that you will compel the danger to pass from you.

  • But, being myself, you fancy that the danger will pass from me?

  • As we pass from left to right in Table XXV.

  • In the case of annual inequalities, at least that of the declination, it is a somewhat suggestive fact that the range seems to become less as we pass from older to more recent results, or from shorter to longer periods of years.

  • P1/M and P2/M both increase decidedly as we pass from years of many to years of few sun spots; i.

  • Hence the term is extensively applied to cases where a thing is made to pass from a confined state to one of greater freedom or openness.

  • To fall in pitch; to pass from a higher to a lower tone.

  • Defn: To become gas; to pass from a liquid to a gaseous state.

  • Defn: A large ornamental drinking vessel having two or more handles, intended to pass from hand to hand, as at a banquet.

  • Defn: The quality in consequence of which an electric charge tends to discharge itself, as into the air by a spark, or to pass from a body of greater to one of less electrical potential.

  • To cause to pass from to another; to cause to be instilled or imbibed; as, to transfuse a spirit of patriotism into a man; to transfuse a love of letters.

  • So, if led by Micah, we pass from God's requirements to His gifts, look at the change in the aspect which God bears to us.

  • The meaning of this change of clothing is given in verse 4: 'I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee.

  • And unto him He said, Behold, I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment.

  • All denominations acknowledge that for any man by faith to pass from death to life is a change for the better.

  • In this world we pass from death to life: not that we have actually been in the grave and brought to life beyond it; but the believer experiences this by faith.

  • It is to pass from death to life and immortality, in Christ, beyond the grave, where flesh and blood can never enter.

  • Thus it is evident that a man may in this life be justified, sanctified, pass from death to life, may enjoy eternal life, and be born again through faith in these several correspondent facts.

  • Thus it is impossible for A ever to emanate from the conception not-A, and consequently without a real term to produce the transition it is impossible to pass from not-A to A, even in the purely ideal order.

  • And now let us pass from what we are accustomed to regard as a dead mineral, to a living grain of corn.

  • But surely the miracle is an outward act, and to pass from it to the inner motive imposes a greater strain upon logic than that involved in our ordinary methods of estimating men.

  • To pass from economics to psychology is to pass from Man to men, from society as a direct object of attack to the individuals who compose it.

  • It is to pass from a certain confined social maturity, a confused mellowness, into a world wholly adventurous and critical, into a freedom which achieves itself at the expense of solidity and warmth.

  • To pass from a definition to an example, let me compare Wells in this respect with the greatest and most typical figure of the opposite camp in contemporary English fiction; I mean Joseph Conrad.

  • But there is a striking difference between the clauses; for we pass from an affirmation to a command.

  • A conjunction forms a bridge over the gap between two statements, and, where they are neither long nor complicated, we pass from one to the other without noticing any distinct break.

  • In the second example there is not the same change of grammatical construction, but the change in thought is equally great; we pass from a statement of details to a statement of the general result.

  • He allows his portrait to pass from hand to hand, and condescendingly smiles on the artist who inscribes these words at the bottom of an engraving of the day: "An event which took place under Ysabeau, representative of the people.

  • Nobody knows; for most of them are ready to pass from one to the other camp according as the chances for success appear more or less great.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pass from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    avec les; colonial office; cracked wheat; hath heard; make known; other dogs; pass sentence; pass that; pass them; pass through; passage home; passed away; passed close; passed over; passed several; passenger cargo; passenger train; passengers were; passerine birds; passing away; passing good; passing through; passing vessel; passionate love; passive obedience; whilst speaking