Passage

Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

·vi Reception; currency.

II. Passage ·vi A movement or an evacuation of the bowels.

III. Passage ·vi Removal from life; decease; departure; death.

IV. Passage ·vi A pass or en encounter; as, a passage at arms.

V. Passage ·vi Price paid for the liberty to pass; fare; as, to pay one's passage.

VI. Passage ·vi A separate part of a course, process, or series; an occurrence; an incident; an act or deed.

VII. Passage ·vi A continuous course, process, or progress; a connected or continuous series; as, the passage of time.

VIII. Passage ·vi Transit by means of conveyance; journey, as by water, carriage, car, or the like; travel; right, liberty, or means, of passing; conveyance.

IX. Passage ·vi A particular portion constituting a part of something continuous; ·esp., a portion of a book, speech, or musical composition; a paragraph; a clause.

X. Passage ·vi Way; road; path; channel or course through or by which one passes; way of exit or entrance; way of access or transit. Hence, a common avenue to various apartments in a building; a hall; a corridor.

XI. Passage ·vi The act of passing; transit from one place to another; movement from point to point; a going by, over, across, or through; as, the passage of a man or a carriage; the passage of a ship or a bird; the passage of light; the passage of fluids through the pores or channels of the body.

XII. Passage ·vi In parliamentary proceedings: (a) The course of a proposition (bill, resolution, ·etc.) through the several stages of consideration and action; as, during its passage through Congress the bill was amended in both Houses. (b) The advancement of a bill or other proposition from one stage to another by an affirmative vote; ·esp., the final affirmative action of the body upon a proposition; hence, adoption; enactment; as, the passage of the bill to its third reading was delayed.