1. pass
Pass the salt, please.
During the test, she felt very sick, so she got a pass to go to the toilet.
You can't enter here unless you have a pass.
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.
You may be able to pass unnoticed in a city, but in a village that's not possible.
Go straight down the road, and when you pass the traffic light you're there.
I passed all my classes this year but I wanted to get higher marks.
The patient may pass away at any moment.
I got my driver's license on the second time I tried to pass the driver's test.
Pass on, please, and do not obstruct the way.
I have a whole box of cigars ready to pass out when my son is born.
This is a golden opportunity we'd be stupid to pass up. Let's get to work and finish it all in one fell swoop.
Was your mock exam score this time within the pass range for your preferred school?
He killed time in a coffee shop watching girls pass by.
I think you fall well within 'cute girl'. You'd easily go and pass in his judgement.
2. surpass
If Spenser doesn't keep adding and translating sentences, the other contributors will surely surpass him.
The results surpassed all our expectations
Nobody can surpass him.
China will only surpass this amount if it keeps up a 24% annual growth rate in the next two years.
The success of the film surpassed all expectations.
to surpass = to have superior abilities
Your cooking is always excellent but today you have surpassed yourself.
Prewar levels of production were surpassed in 1929
The book's success has surpassed everyone's expectations.
production surpasses the load consumption
You surpass me.
... the Chinese economy, will surpass that of the U.
Christopher Columbus's secret love letters to Queen Isabella - undiscovered for centuries - have been rumored to rival, if not surpass, the Kama Sutra.
The reason the Northern and Southern Dynasties had failed in their rule was that they allowed literary splendor to surpass real substance.
3. get through
This epidemic is awful, but I'm sure we'll get through it somehow.
Just leave everybody alone, and help us get through today.
I couldn't get through.
We will never get through this vocabulary
Will Phoebe get through writing a book about Friends?
He had a terrible headache but managed to get through the day.
You have to get through your revision tonight.
It is hard to get through to the department director.
How can old people get through the cold winters.
I've got to get through this chapter before i go out.
reach sb by telephone/It's hard to get through to Janet
I hope I get through this aerobics class.
And if he can get through to the number you want, what might he say? If he can't get through to the number you want, he might say: " I'm sorry I can't get through. Would you like to hold on or would you prefer to ring back.
I've tried persuasion and punishment, but I just don't seem to be able to get through to him
get through our sadness
4. break through
Finally, we managed to break through the forest to call for help.
Soldiers want to break through the enemy lines.
Shoots seem tiny; to reach the sun they can break through a brick wall
1) The crowd BROKE THROUGH the police barriers and attacked the hunters. 2) A group of young demonstrators attempted to break through police lines.
It was impossible to break through the crowd gathered around the stage. After a while the sun broke through the clouds again.
Inglese parola "vượt qua"(break through) si verifica in set:
6/7/2019 afternoon