Jump to content

passn

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Bavarian

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

From Middle High German passen, borrowed from French passer, intermediated and influenced by Dutch passen, from Middle French passer, from Old French passer, from Vulgar Latin *passāre, derived from Latin passus (step, noun).

Verb

[edit]

passn (past participle passt)

  1. (with dative) to fit
  2. (with dative) to suit, to be suitable
  3. (intransitive, with zu) to go with (correspond or fit well with, to match)
Conjugation
[edit]
Conjugation of passn
infinitive passn
past participle passn
present past subjunctive
1st person singular pass passad
2nd person singular passt passast
3rd person singular passt passad
1st person plural passn passadn
2nd person plural passts passats
3rd person plural passn passadn
imperative
singular pass
plural passts
Derived terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

Pass +‎ -n, a 20th century borrowing from English pass. Same root as Etymology 1.

Verb

[edit]

passn (past participle passt)

  1. (sports) to pass (to move the ball or puck to a teammate)
Conjugation
[edit]
Conjugation of passn
infinitive passn
past participle passn
present past subjunctive
1st person singular pass passad
2nd person singular passt passast
3rd person singular passt passad
1st person plural passn passadn
2nd person plural passts passats
3rd person plural passn passadn
imperative
singular pass
plural passts
Derived terms
[edit]