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Tuesday
Sep072010

“They're passed out.”

You've spent the day at the beach with your young children. Now you're riding back home. You see that your kids are asleep in the back seat of the car. You tell your husband:

 They're passed out.

(be) passed out

To be "passed out" means to be asleep. However, "going to sleep" suggests something that you do on purpose. "Passing out" is something that happens without your control. A person "passes out" when he or she is extremely tired, drunk, or has been injured. Usually it happens in a place that's not normal to sleep in:

There was a guy passed out on a park bench. I was like, "What's he doing there?"

In the example above, when the mother says that her kids are "passed out", it means that they were really tired from playing outside in the sun all day, and they couldn't stay awake. Maybe they fell asleep really fast, or they're in a really deep sleep.

When you're talking about going to sleep, there are several stages like this:

go to sleep > be asleep > wake up > be awake

It's the same with "passing out":

pass out > be passed out > regain consciousness > be conscious

Or

pass out > be passed out > wake up > be awake

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