[ UK /pˈɑːspɔːt/ ]
[ US /ˈpæsˌpɔɹt/ ]
NOUN
  1. any authorization to pass or go somewhere
    the pass to visit had a strict time limit
  2. a document issued by a country to a citizen allowing that person to travel abroad and re-enter the home country
  3. any quality or characteristic that gains a person a favorable reception or acceptance or admission
    her pleasant personality is already a recommendation
    his wealth was not a passport into the exclusive circles of society
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How To Use passport In A Sentence

  • They wanted me to bring my US passport, and Mexican Visa, but instead of two black and white infantil size photos, they wanted color photos here in Morelos and they only wanted a color copy of the pages in my passport and FM3 visa showing my photo and the page of the FM3 visa that I had then showing the prorrogas (renewals) to verify who I am and that I live here legally. Page 2
  • Education is the key to unlocking the world, a passport to freedom. Oprah Winfrey 
  • The State Department claims a 1980s General Services Administration directive resulted in the destruction of many passport applications and other "nonvital" passport records, including Hot Air » Top Picks
  • Dave couldn't find his passport at the airport and then there were further complications when Fiona lost her baggage.
  • The Heathrow stamp impacted on one of the emptier pages of her worn, blue passport.
  • In fact, during deportation souteneurs buy tickets, bring meal, collect suitcases and even give money for the new passport.
  • Holders of A . passport with validity less than six months.
  • The passports came from his friend `Picasso", who worked in the Perservancia, the casbah of Bogota rising behind the Hilton Hotel. BLACK EAGLES
  • His passport had only been issued at the British Legation in Stockholm, and his description tallied exactly with the signalment issued by Scotland The Days Before Yesterday
  • So here you had the scenario, you've got a highjacker on the plane; he's got his passport in his pocket, or in his luggage, and they hit the building, and this enormous fireball erupts and this passport floats out of his pocket or whatever, and gets through the fireball without being singed, then it gets out of the building and falls to the ground where somebody can find it. Interview with David Ray Griffin on the Rob Kall Radio Show
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