| Idiom | Meaning | Example | 
| part company | 
separate, go in different directions, split up
 | 
Mel and Brad parted company after they arrived in Germany.
 | 
| part with | 
sell, allow someone else to own, let go of
 | 
Papa won't part with his Peugeot. He'd never sell it.
 | 
| partners in crime | 
people who plan and commit crimes together, boozing buddies
 | 
As kids, Andy and I took apples from a neighbor's tree. We were partners in crime, so to speak.
 | 
| party-pooper | 
one who leaves a party, stick-in-the-mud
 | 
You party-pooper! Stay here and dance with us.
 | 
| party to that | 
(See a party to that)
 | 
 | 
| pass around | 
pass from person to person in the room, hand out
 | 
The speaker passed around a  sheet of paper for us to sign.
 | 
| pass away | 
die, pass on
 | 
Grandma passed away in 1974. She was 92.
 | 
| pass for | 
appear similar to, look like
 | 
In that uniform, you could pass for a police officer.
 | 
| pass off | 
offer as real or genuine, use a fake object or paper
 | 
If you pass off counterfeit money, you can be charged with a crime.
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| pass on | 
die, bite the dust, kick the bucket
 | 
Before her dad passed on, she visited him every day.
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