Pass out
1Pass Out — «Pass Out» …
2pass out — {v.}, {informal} 1. To lose consciousness; faint. * /She went back to work while she was still sick, and finally she just passed out./ Compare: GIVE OUT(3). 2. or {slang}[pass out cold] To drop into a drunken stupor; become unconscious from drink …
3pass out — {v.}, {informal} 1. To lose consciousness; faint. * /She went back to work while she was still sick, and finally she just passed out./ Compare: GIVE OUT(3). 2. or {slang}[pass out cold] To drop into a drunken stupor; become unconscious from drink …
4pass out — (v.) lose consciousness, 1915, from PASS (Cf. pass) (v.) + OUT (Cf. out). Probably from weakened sense of earlier meaning to die (1899). Meaning to distribute is attested from 1926 …
5pass out — ► pass out 1) become unconscious. 2) Brit. complete one s initial training in the armed forces. Main Entry: ↑pass …
6pass out — vi to lose consciousness <three men passed out from heat exhaustion (F. J. Bell)> …
7pass out — [v] become unconscious, usually from abusing a substance black out*, drop, faint, keel over*, lose consciousness, swoon; concept 308 …
8pass out — index disburse (distribute), disperse (disseminate), divide (distribute), parcel Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William …
9pass\ out — v informal 1. To lose consciousness; faint. She went back to work while she was still sick, and finally she just passed out. Compare: give out(3) 2. or slang pass out cold To drop into a drunken stupor; become unconscious from drink. After three… …
10pass out — phrasal verb Word forms pass out : present tense I/you/we/they pass out he/she/it passes out present participle passing out past tense passed out past participle passed out 1) [intransitive] to suddenly become unconscious, for example because you …