She passed his house.
BUT
She walked quickly PAST his house (here PAST is a Preposition).
Is it "years past" or "years passed"? It depends on the context. If you are stating "In years past,..." then you use 'past'. If you are in the middle of your sentence "...when years passed by and nothing got done..." then you use 'passed'.
The past tense is passed.
Both had past and have past are correct.Three hours have passed and Jan still hasn't arrived.Three hours had passed and Jane hadn't arrived.
No, has passed is the present perfect tense.
The past tense of pass is passed.
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.
Go past the chicken house.
As I passed my home town of Cincinnati, thoughts of my now secret past came flooding back.After he had gone past the school, he then passed the church.*While passed is the past tense of the verb to pass, past is a noun, adjective, or adverb, never a verb.
It can be either, depending on how it is used. Here's an example for each - "This past weekend, we went to the park." "I passed by her house yesterday."
the answer for the homophone for past is passed
The homophone for passed is past.
The past tense of "pass" is "passed," and the past participle is also "passed."
The homophones for "passed" are "past" and "fast."
The homophone for "past" is passed. Example sentence: Susan passed the test.
It is passed. Past is used as a noun (times gone by), an adjective (previous) or adverb (beyond). Example : "I passed the test. I passed the football. I passed the church while driving." Example : "He studies the past. The danger is past. I drove past the church."
past PAST when talking about time. 1987 was in the past. PASSED when talking about people. My dad passed away in 1990.
The homonym for the word "past" is "passed."