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dépasses

Dépasses is a conjugated form of the French verb dépasser. It functions as the second-person singular present indicative form (tu dépasses) and, in the subjunctive mood, as the second-person singular present subjunctive form (que tu dépasses).

The verb dépasser means to surpass, to overtake, or to exceed. It is used in a wide

Morphology and usage notes: dépasses carries the diacritic on the initial e of the prefix dé-, reflecting

Etymology and history: the verb dépasser comes from Old French despasser or dépasser, formed with the prefix

See also: surpass, exceed, overtake, passer. The word dépas­ses is not a noun or a proper name;

range
of
contexts,
including
speed
limits,
performance,
time,
measurements,
and
quantities.
Examples
include:
Tu
dépasses
les
autres
dans
la
course.
Il
faut
que
tu
dépasses
ton
ancien
record.
In
everyday
language,
it
conveys
going
beyond
a
boundary
or
achieving
more
than
a
given
benchmark.
the
etymology
from
dé-
plus
passer.
The
form
can
appear
in
affirmative
statements
(indicative)
or
in
clauses
requiring
the
subjunctive,
such
as
after
expressions
like
Il
faut
que
ou
Bien
que,
where
the
meaning
is
“you
surpass”
or
“you
may
surpass.”
dé-
added
to
passer
(to
pass).
The
sense
developed
to
include
going
beyond
a
limit
or
overtaking
another,
and
dépendant
forms
like
dépasses
appeared
as
part
of
the
standard
conjugation
in
Middle
French
and
modern
French.
it
is
a
grammatical
form
used
to
express
the
action
of
surpassing
by
the
second-person
singular.