In some localities that is the law.
Yes.
She passed his house. BUT She walked quickly PAST his house (here PAST is a Preposition).
To notify people of any event in order to have them attend.
Go past the chicken house.
NO that had nothing to do with what your doing now that's the past you did it you cant change it o well it doesn't really matter
No, "walked" is the verb and "past the yellow house" is a prepositional phrase indicating where the subject walked. "Past" is the preposition in the phrase.
It was legal in the past. Now it is not legal.
The correct sentence is "You drove past his house." "Past" is used as a preposition to indicate movement beyond something, while "pass" is a verb indicating action.
In legal terms, "past" refers to events that have already occurred or circumstances that existed in the past. "Present" refers to the current time or circumstances that are ongoing at the moment.
The correct phrase is "You dashed past the house." "Past" is used to indicate movement beyond a specific point, while "passed" is the past tense of the verb "pass." "Pass" is not the correct word in this context.
That is totally up to you but you cannot always judge or base someones past on their future or relationship with you. What someone has done in their past is their past that does not mean things will repeat themselves.
The practice of utilizing tarot is for answering questions for the past, present and future. The question need only be presented by the querent.