1.
That of the second, though it may rise greatly, has, however, a certain boundary, beyond which it cannot well pass for any considerable time together
2.
The pretence for raising the denomination of the coin was to prevent the exportation of gold and silver, by making equal quantities of those metals pass for greater sums in the colony than they did in the mother country
3.
Our merchant exporters, on the contrary, make entry of more than they export ; sometimes out of vanity, and to pass for great dealers in goods which pay no duty gain a bounty back
4.
The Team Defense intercepted a pass for their first turnover of the game and the offense again came out in the no huddle
5.
Gina herself would easily pass for early thirties
6.
I put on clean clothes and checked myself over, as I was hoping to pass for clean and natty when I got to Felicity’s later that night
7.
Such overtures, depending on the (underlying) designs of the speaker and the receptiveness of his audience, could be incendiary and volatile at times, not unlike (the) rhetorical expressions that pass for populism in our own times
8.
standardized working environments? When measured in constant dollars, is he or she properly convinced that the average worker employed in comparable positions is relatively worse off today? It seems that the (fictitious) contempt for Wal-Mart and to a lesser extent, their competitors who are being given a free pass for not performing quite as well, perhaps, has less to do with the negative impact on traditional (small) businesses and changing landscapes than their (Democrats‘) obligatory pandering to their union base whose conflicting interests, properly understood, need not be elaborated here
9.
Only four months later, in September 2005 Cheney underwent a multiple bypass for his heart
10.
He fixed on the West Highland Way as he could pass for a walker and the area was wild and hard to get to in a car
11.
“We"ll let that pass for the time being,” Kemp said in a business like tone
12.
“There will be no three-day pass for that one: at noon, when the police arrive to receive detainees, he will be taken to San José
13.
“I’d never thought I’d pass for cold-hearted
14.
Besides, the country that to adopt our Project will pass for the humanity’s history as universal model of the progress and development for the merit of ending in a definitive way with the misery, hunger and the social abandonment, without destroying the nature
15.
and have also caused their sons, whom they bore to me, to pass for them through the fire, to devour them
16.
It occurred to me that except for his intensity he might pass for a merchant
17.
“I think I'll pass for now
18.
25 He showed what should come to pass forever, and secret things or ever they came
19.
things that came to pass for the sins of those who were killed
20.
Fatima smiles so wide she could pass for Ronald McDonald
21.
M: Surely, the memory of an event cannot pass for the event it-
22.
And it found she had frequently left pass forms on her desk that were easily
23.
It was customary to let forty days pass for all who were
24.
It blocks unsafe levels of energy from reaching your eyes, while allowing enough to pass for useful observation
25.
Mark turned to see that it was his cousin Dren, accompanied by a slim blond girl who lacked only pointed ears to pass for an elf, being just under a meter and a half tall with delicate features and hazel eyes
26.
was supposed to pass for the real thing, a Persian knotted
27.
Besides that noble Judas exhorted the people to keep themselves from sin forsomuch as they saw before their eyes the things that came to pass for the sins of those who were killed
28.
She could never pass for an outcast
29.
hair in need of a decent haircut, but he could pass for good-looking, he decided
30.
Had sufficient time to eat and pass for his house to clothing before the meeting
31.
My aim as a traveller is always to pass for a local so although my Arabic was nonexistent at least I didn’t look out of place
32.
Our short lived experiment as an all male troupe ended when three ‘resting’ actors from Alwyn’s Horsham Repertory days arrived to fill the gaps – Valerie, a blonde of thirty-five who could pass for twenty as long as she stayed behind the proscenium; William, a gaunt but well-made queer in his forties; and Ruth, who looked like Hansel and Gretel’s witch
33.
I need a compass for these seas
34.
The weekend before the first ‗guest‘ had arrived, Desolé prepared the way by arranging for fifteen year-old Sebastian to meet her accountant, Jack, a youthful looking thirty-one year old who could easily pass for Sebastian‘s brother
35.
I could easily pass for a woman with the
36.
He let it pass for now
37.
It was the first time that the idea of being buried in England had ever crossed his mind and he hoped it would never come to pass for him
38.
are victims of rape and other violent attacks, neither the trauma nor the related stresses pass for women, but are an ordinary and daily part of their lives
39.
winter weekends that could pass for spring in many parts of the country, and
40.
pinch of salt at the time, and had let it pass for the sake of courtesy and respect
41.
But let that pass for a while
42.
The windows can only be electronically opened with a special made pass for that purpose
43.
“Rambo”, the only white man in the group, although his skin had turned such a deep bronze that he could pass for one of his black colleagues, was trying to convince the others that a raid on the fuel storage tanks at the motor pool would give them the strategic advantage they needed
44.
five other languages, and looks the part – she could pass for a Muslim
45.
He could pass for ‘very sun-tanned’, and Caucasian, if he was careful
46.
Everyone studied the photo and Gal announced excitedly, “Max, with a bit of make-up, you could pass for Kay; you could be there at the handover instead of the real Kay
47.
Along with the fake Pakistani identity card produced for her by the Time Patrol while she was under the physical form of Parmat, she could easily pass for a native Pakistani man, something that the Taliban certainly didn’t expect or couldn’t even imagine
48.
and he will pass for a sage
49.
her what he hoped would pass for a reassuring glance
50.
Because a secret search for hidden valuables at Daifen’s house was best undertaken if one were invited there under an innocent pretext, a pretext that would occur that year at the Daifen residence only for one night––the gala on the eve of the new year; and in order to mingle with the nobles invited, I had to pass for a one
51.
Four plates finished and a fifth for Fleurette, then carried them to the pass for Fleurette to inspect
52.
only been in the Pugilist for a few months but in fact, I have been within the Pass for five years
53.
“The Ghastly Beggars that never step into the Central Plains would enter the Pass for this bald old man that looked like a beggar?”
54.
— in the wilds of New Mexico, to be exact— a short, slightly round, just-beginning-to-gray lady with enough tan aiding her olive skin so she’d pass for a member of any tribe, pulled the last chock from under a double wheel and tossed it aside
55.
I’m pretty sure I could pass for one of the lower class
56.
The Islamics gave the French a pass for only so
57.
She had on shorts and a tee shirt; she could pass for his elder sister
58.
Her eyes were so dark they could pass for black and she was a bit on the plump side though not enough so to be considered over
59.
Now, had the Town Council been advised of such easily possible profits they clearly would not have let the property pass for a mere ten cents an acre
60.
that might pass for a weapon in her home
61.
Unbelievably, the inept Alaska Airlines attendant had lost my boarding pass for the Deadhorse flight, which I should have been given in return for the one for the Anchorage flight - which I had had to return at once, when it turned out I wasn't flying to Anchorage
62.
He’d already spent all his money over at The Lonely River Pass for a priceless jewel and a fifteen-karat-gold nugget
63.
blue hair that could pass for black
64.
Kurt’s scheming was interrupted by a roar from the bar as Notre Dame picked off another errant pass for a pick six
65.
There was nothing in my room that could pass for an ashtray
66.
One of those divorced women who think they can pass for fifteen years younger than their true age, and you would really like to know if her hair was blond when she was born
67.
Massie thought he could pass for a movie star
68.
We now participate with Christ as He brings those eternal covenants to pass for the nation of Israel
69.
aligned so the four directions of the compass form a cross through the middle of each of four sides
70.
The Giza pyramids were precisely aligned so the four directions of the compass form a cross
71.
She had practically nothing on! Nothing that could pass for clothes anyway
72.
The direct fall of gravity down the pass sides, and a reduction in sluice size, aided the higher pressure of the fluid as it shot out into the pass forming interlacing arcs of fluid across it over thirty feet into the air
73.
If I could pass for a reader, college and med school were possible, even if I had to lie to get there
74.
There had to be more, like me, who would rather simply pass for readers and have a normal life
75.
As soon as she said that I thought of playing that up and use it as an escape pass for at least a day
76.
And rows of lifeless pictures, made up of models copied in different attitudes, with studio properties around them, are the result, and pass for art in many quarters
77.
If you will but nullify by criticism and free-handling the truth on Atonement, you may retain all the rest of Christianity, and pass for liberal Christians, without hindrance from the chief enemy of Christ
78.
they wore couldn't pass for a dress as we normal think of a dress
79.
His flesh was still warm, and it was odd how he could almost pass for a human
80.
Upon my soul! I see that I really might pass for a romantic figure with some people
81.
Honour and virtue are the ornaments of the mind, without which the body, though it be so, has no right to pass for beautiful; but if modesty is one of the virtues that specially lend a grace and charm to mind and body, why should she who is loved for her beauty part with it to gratify one who for his pleasure alone strives with all his might and energy to rob her of it? I was born free, and that I might live in freedom I chose the solitude of the fields; in the trees of the mountains I find society, the clear waters of the brooks are my mirrors, and to the trees and waters I make known my thoughts and charms
82.
What lame leg hast thou got by it, what broken rib, what cracked head, that thou canst not forget that jest? For jest and sport it was, properly regarded, and had I not seen it in that light I would have returned and done more mischief in revenging thee than the Greeks did for the rape of Helen, who, if she were alive now, or if my Dulcinea had lived then, might depend upon it she would not be so famous for her beauty as she is;" and here he heaved a sigh and sent it aloft; and said Sancho, "Let it pass for a jest as it cannot be revenged in earnest, but I know what sort of jest and earnest it was, and I know it will never be rubbed out of my memory any more than off my shoulders
83.
Thinkest thou that the Amarillises, the Phillises, the Sylvias, the Dianas, the Galateas, the Filidas, and all the rest of them, that the books, the ballads, the barber's shops, the theatres are full of, were really and truly ladies of flesh and blood, and mistresses of those that glorify and have glorified them? Nothing of the kind; they only invent them for the most part to furnish a subject for their verses, and that they may pass for lovers, or for men valiant enough to be so; and so it suffices me to think and believe that the good Aldonza Lorenzo is fair and virtuous; and as to her pedigree it is very little matter, for no one will examine into it for the purpose of conferring any order upon her, and I, for my part, reckon her the most exalted princess in the world
84.
carefully thought over what they should do to carry out their object, the curate hit upon an idea very well adapted to humour Don Quixote, and effect their purpose; and his notion, which he explained to the barber, was that he himself should assume the disguise of a wandering damsel, while the other should try as best he could to pass for a squire, and that they should thus proceed to where Don Quixote was, and he,
85.
To be wrestled with as I pass for the solid prizes of the universe,
86.
She, with broken sobs and half-suppressed sighs, went on to say, "My misfortune, my misadventure, is simply this, that I entreated my brother to dress me up as a man in a suit of his clothes, and take me some night, when our father was asleep, to see the whole town; he, overcome by my entreaties, consented, and dressing me in this suit and himself in clothes of mine that fitted him as if made for him (for he has not a hair on his chin, and might pass for a very beautiful young girl), to-night, about an hour ago, more or less, we left the house, and guided by our youthful and foolish impulse we made the circuit of the whole town, and then, as we were about to return home, we saw a great troop of people coming, and my brother said to me, 'Sister, this must be the round, stir your feet and put wings to them, and follow me as fast as you can, lest they recognise us, for that would be a bad business for us;' and so saying he turned about and began, I cannot say to run but to fly; in less than six paces I fell from fright, and then the officer of justice came up and carried me before your worships, where I find myself put to shame before all these people as whimsical and vicious
87.
In short, he might pass for what is commonly called a
88.
trade, for me to pass for a maid and dispose of myself as such on the first
89.
what was that? why, that we should pass for husband and wife: I never
90.
modesty: this, they observed, might pass for a beauty the more with those
91.
certainly I was not at all out of figure to pass for a modest girl
92.
pass for; but it did pass, under favour of the growing passion I had
93.
pass for a dragoness of virtue, by flying out into those violent and ever
94.
'If he should really be guilty,' said he, 'and did really put in to the Island of Elba; if he is really charged with a letter for the Bonapartist committee at Paris, and if they find this letter upon him, those who have supported him will pass for his accomplices
95.
"We shall have the pleasure another time," said the countess; "you promise that?" Monte Cristo inclined himself without answering, but the gesture might pass for assent
96.
The boys you liked before Brent were the innocuous, asexual types who could pass for any member of whatever boy band you were listening to at the moment
97.
One of her pupils had given her a pass for Mignon
98.
Gilbert in his old age told some cavaliers he got a pass for nowt from Maister Gatherer one time mass he did and he seen his brud Maister Wull the playwriter up in Lunnon in a wrastling play wud a man on's back
99.
There were also the things related to the snow: the dangerously high rivers and streams I’d need to ford alone, the temperatures that would put me at risk of hypothermia, the reality that I’d have to rely exclusively on my map and compass for long stretches when the trail was concealed by the snow—all of those made more grave by the fact that I was alone
100.
The cut of his clothes would have made him pass for an elegant man, if those clothes had not been torn to shreds; still they did not show signs of wear, and the fine cloth, beneath the careful hands of the prisoner, soon recovered its gloss in the parts which were still perfect, for the wearer tried his best to make it assume the