Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Past

Past , adjective

[From Pass, v.]

Of or pertaining to a former time or state; neither present nor future; gone by; elapsed; ended; spent; as, past troubles; past offences.
Past ages. — Milton
Collocations (1)
Past master , See under Master.

Past , noun

A former time or state; a state of things gone by.
The past, at least, is secure. — D. Webster
The present is only intelligible in the light of the past, often a very remote past indeed. — Trench

Past , preposition

1.
Beyond, in position, or degree; further than; beyond the reach or influence of.
Who being past feeling. — Eph. iv. 19
Galled past endurance. — Macaulay
Until we be past thy borders. — Num. xxi. 22
Love, when once past government, is consequently past shame. — L'Estrange
2.
Beyond, in time; after; as, past the hour.
Is it not past two o'clock? — Shakespeare
3.
Above; exceeding; more than. [Rare]
Not past three quarters of a mile. — Shakespeare
Bows not past three quarters of a yard long. — Spenser

Past (pȧst) , adverb

By; beyond; as, he ran past.
The alarum of drums swept past. — Longfellow