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  1. ANSWER KEY. Past, Pass, and Passed. The word pass can be a verb or a noun. example of pass as a verb: Please pass the peas. example of pass as a noun: You can use a hall pass to go to the library. Passed is the past tense of the verb to pass. example of a sentences with passed: The quarterback passed the football.

  2. Let's do English ESL general grammar practice. They read the information, then choose whether it is 'past or 'passed' that needs to go in the gap.

  3. Gran explains that there are regular past simple forms and irregular past simple forms. Write these past simple forms from the video in the correct group. watched taught passed drank invited wrote talked sang played ate regular (+ed) irregular watched taught

  4. The commonly confused words passed and past may be troublesome for some youngsters. Here’s a worksheet that is sure to clarify the difference between the two words! Each word has a brief definition, then your student is asked to write the correct one in the blank to complete the sentences.

  5. When to Use Past vs. Passed. The word past refers to an earlier time and can be an adjective (as in “a past girlfriend”) or a noun (as in “the distant past”). It can also be a preposition that shows a relative position (as in “past the corner”).

  6. Passed and past are easy to confuse. Passed is the past tense of to pass (e.g., 'He passed the post,' 'He passed away'). For everything else, use past.

  7. Grammar worksheets > Verbs > Verb tenses > Simple past > Past or passed? They have to put ´past´ or ´passed´ in the gap. Thanks to Aisha77 for the lovely template.