Study the phrasal verbs. Lead-in.

Jack felt giddy and passed out.

“Did he pass away or just pass out?” the passers-by asked each other.

Mr. White: “Jimmy, could you please pass this book on to your father? It’s his.”

Jimmy: “Sure. Mr White, you could easily pass for/ off as Mr. President. You look alike!”

Jenny is at a loss.

If she pulls through the project, she’ll start pulling in lots of money. Unfortunately, she has no brilliant ideas now.

More phrasal verbs with PASS & PULL …

pass awaydie:
Their father passed away shortly after their mother’s death.
pass bygo past:
Yesterday Jake passed by my house and didn’t come over.
pass for/ off as sb/ sthbe taken for sb/ sth you are not in reality:
Jake easily passed for Mr. Gray as the latter had never been to that place and no living soul had ever seen him.
pass off  happen, take place:
The pageant passed off better than expected and had a lot of positive reviews.
pass on  (to sb) give sth to sb else:
Could you please pass the newspaper on to your dad? I’ve already finished with it.
communicate information/ a message to sb:
The manager asked me to pass this information on to my colleagues in the office.
pass out  lose consciousness, faint:
She passed out before the exam.
pass over  not give promotion in a job:
Mike was passed over again for some junior colleague with less experience.
pull back  move back, withdraw:
The French army had to pull back because of the severe cold of the Russian winter.
pull down  destroy or ruin a building so that it does not exist anymore:
It was very short-sighted of the local government to pull down the historical building that dated back to the 10th century.
pull in  (inf) bring sb to a police department for an interrogation:
Peter was pulled in yesterday evening to the police station but he refused to say anything without his lawyer.
(of trains) approach a place and stop:
Look! Our train is pulling in, we must hurry.
make or earn money:
Kitty is pulling in big money.
pull over  (of a vehicle) come to a halt/ stop:
Meg couldn’t find the road map in the glove compartment, so she pulled over and continued searching.
pull through  recover after an illness or operation:
We hope she’ll pull through after the open-heart surgery.
complete sth successfully despite difficulties:
I’m sure we’ll pull through and win the award “The best project of the year”.
pull up  (of a car) stop at your destination:
The black car turned round the corner and pulled up.
criticize sb for what they are doing:
Jim’s boss pulled Jim up on his being late for work recently.

Practice