Passed vs Past — Difference Explained for Kids | English1to5.com
🤔Indian English Errors

Passed vs Past — What’s the Difference? | Confusing Words for Kids

Never confuse passed and past again! Visual comparison, memory trick, Hindi explanation, practice & quiz.

Updated: June 5, 2026 · ⏱️ 10 min · Page 19/30 · ⭐⭐ Grade 3-5

🔵🟠 Compare💡 Trick🇮🇳 Hindi✏️ 10 Fill-Blanks❓ 8 Quiz

🔵🟠 Side-by-Side Comparison

passed
Verb (action): ‘I passed the exam,’ ‘She passed the ball’
past
Not a verb — noun/adj/prep: ‘in the past,’ ‘walk past the shop’

💡 Trick to Remember

PASSED = always a VERB (action word). PAST = everything ELSE (noun, adjective, preposition). If it’s an action → passed. If not → past.

🇮🇳 Why Indians Confuse These

Hindi uses different words: पास हुआ (passed exam), बीता हुआ (past/gone). The confusion is purely English — ‘passed’ and ‘past’ sound identical.

📖 Example Sentences

🔵 passed

  • Aarav learned to use passed correctly.
  • The teacher corrected the passed usage.
  • In Indian English, passed is used differently.
  • Standard English uses passed this way.
  • Priya fixed her passed mistake.

🟠 past

  • past is the correct alternative.
  • Rahul now uses past properly.
  • The exam expects past not passed.
  • Modern English prefers past.
  • Practice using past in sentences.

📢 Read Aloud — Both Words!

  • Aarav knows: means one thing, past means another!
  • Priya used both correctly: here and past there.
  • The exam tested: “Choose or past for each blank.”
  • Remember the trick and never confuse and past again!

✏️ Fill in the Blank

1. Choose correctly: ___

💡 Standard English

2. The correct word is ___.

💡 Modern usage

3. Don’t say ___.

💡 Indian English error

4. Say ___ instead.

💡 Correct version

5. ___ is the proper word.

💡 Standard form

6. Avoid using ___.

💡 Non-standard

7. The teacher prefers ___.

💡 Correct

8. In exams, use ___.

💡 Exam answer

9. ___ sounds professional.

💡 Formal English

10. Replace ___ with ___.

💡 Fix the error

⚠️ Common Mistakes

❌ Please passed.
✅ Please past.
💡 PASSED = always a VERB (action word)

❓ Quiz

1. ‘passed’ in Indian English means:
2. The correct word is:
3. This is an Indian English error because:
4. In CBSE exams, use:
5. The trick is:
6. Modern English prefers:
7. This error is common among:
8. To fix this habit:

🤓 Fun Facts

🤓 This error is so common in India that many Indians don’t know it’s non-standard!
🤓 Indian English is a recognized variety — but knowing standard English too gives you more options.

📋 Quick Summary — Screenshot This!

passed = Verb (action)
past = Not a verb

People Also Ask

What’s wrong with ‘passed’?

Verb (action): ‘I passed the exam,’ ‘She passed the ball’ PASSED = always a VERB (action word). PAST = everything ELSE (noun, adjective, preposition). If it’s an action → passed. If not → past.

Why do Indians say this?

Hindi uses different words: पास हुआ (passed exam), बीता हुआ (past/gone). The confusion is purely English — ‘passed’ and ‘past’ sound identical.

What to say instead?

Use ‘past’ — Not a verb — noun/adj/prep: ‘in the past,’ ‘walk past the shop’

👨‍👩‍👧 Parent Tips

  1. 1. 🇮🇳 Explain: ‘This is how we say it in India, but standard English says it differently.’
  2. 2. 📧 Check office emails for these errors — they’re everywhere!
  3. 3. 📝 Rewrite 5 Indian English sentences in standard English.
  4. 4. 🎯 No shame! These aren’t ‘mistakes’ — they’re Indian English. But learning both is powerful.
  5. 5. 📅 Fix one Indian-ism per week. In a month, your child sounds international!

❓ FAQ

What’s wrong with ‘passed’?

Verb (action): ‘I passed the exam,’ ‘She passed the ball’ PASSED = always a VERB (action word). PAST = everything ELSE (noun, adjective, preposition). If it’s an action → passed. If not → past.

Why do Indians say this?

Hindi uses different words: पास हुआ (passed exam), बीता हुआ (past/gone). The confusion is purely English — ‘passed’ and ‘past’ sound identical.

What to say instead?

Use ‘past’ — Not a verb — noun/adj/prep: ‘in the past,’ ‘walk past the shop’

Is this tested in exams?

Yes! CBSE/ICSE expect standard English.

Will people understand the Indian version?

In India yes, but internationally it sounds incorrect. Better to learn the standard form.

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