Someone asks me: Where's the restroom? I say: It's pass the bar on your left. VS

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B45

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Someone asks me: Where's the restroom? I say:

It's pass the bar on your left.

VS

It's past the bar on your left.
 

emsr2d2

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The first is incorrect. With locations, use "past" (unless you want to use the verb "to pass").
 

emsr2d2

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If you pass the bar, you walk past the bar. "To pass" and "to walk past" are different. Your sentence started with the word "It's" meaning "It is". That must be followed by "past".
 
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B45

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So if you pass the bar, you walk past the bar? That's exactly what I'm trying to say:

The restroom is pass the bar.

Can you explain further please. Thank you.
 

emsr2d2

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No. We don't use "pass" to describe something's location. You can only use it as a verb (in this context).

Where is the restroom?
It is past the bar.
You get there by walking past the bar.
You get there by passing the bar.
You must pass the bar.

You said it yourself "You pass the bar". You can't change that to "The restroom is pass ...".
 

Rover_KE

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It's a preposition.

'Passed' (pronounced 'past', is also the past tense and past participle of the verb 'to pass'), so you can also say 'Walk that way and when you have passed the bar it's on the right, past the fruit machine.
 
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