bypass
To go around something or skip a step.
Explanation at your level:
You use bypass when you go around a place. If you are walking and see a big hole in the road, you walk around it. You bypass the hole.
When you are driving, you might bypass a busy town to get to your destination faster. It means you skip the town and take a different road.
In business, you might bypass a manager to talk directly to the boss. It means you skip the usual steps to get a faster answer to your question.
The term is often used in technology. You might bypass a security setting on your phone to install an app. It suggests you are finding a way around a restriction.
Academically, researchers often bypass traditional methods to test a new theory. It implies a conscious decision to ignore standard protocols in favor of innovation.
Historically, the term reflects the human desire for efficiency. We constantly seek to bypass limitations, whether they are physical, like mountains, or systemic, like complex legal codes.
Wort in 30 Sekunden
- Means to avoid
- Used for roads
- Used for rules
- Regular verb
Hey there! Think of bypass as your secret shortcut. When you bypass something, you are essentially choosing not to interact with it or go through it.
You might bypass a traffic jam by taking a side street, or bypass a security check if you have special clearance. It is all about finding a way around an obstacle to save time or effort.
The word bypass is a compound of the preposition by (meaning near or past) and the verb pass. It popped up in the 17th century.
It originally referred to physical paths or roads that went around a town. Over time, the meaning expanded to include abstract things like rules, systems, or even medical procedures!
You will hear bypass in both casual and professional settings. In casual talk, it is often about travel: 'We had to bypass the city center.'
In technical or business contexts, it implies skipping a 'bottleneck' or a 'bureaucratic process.' It is a very useful verb for describing efficiency.
While bypass isn't always part of a fixed idiom, it is used in phrases like 'bypass the system' or 'bypass the gatekeepers.' These suggest finding a clever way to get what you want without asking for permission.
Bypass is a regular verb. The past tense is bypassed and the present participle is bypassing. It is usually followed by a direct object.
Pronunciation: The stress is on the first syllable: BY-pass. It rhymes with 'high-class' or 'sky-pass'.
Fun Fact
Originally used for roads that went around towns.
Pronunciation Guide
Long 'a' sound
Short 'a' sound
Common Errors
- misstressing the second syllable
- using a long 'i' incorrectly
- adding extra syllables
Rhymes With
Difficulty Rating
easy
easy
easy
easy
What to Learn Next
Prerequisites
Learn Next
Fortgeschritten
Grammar to Know
Transitive Verbs
I bypass the line.
Examples by Level
I bypass the park.
I go around the park.
Subject + verb + object.
We will bypass the city.
He bypassed the long line.
Can we bypass the traffic?
She bypassed the store.
They bypass the main road.
I bypass the slow path.
We bypass the heavy rain.
You bypass the gate.
I had to bypass the manager.
The software bypasses the error.
We bypassed the usual rules.
They bypassed the security check.
He bypassed the waiting room.
We can bypass the long process.
She bypassed the difficult topic.
I bypassed the registration desk.
The circuit bypasses the main switch.
He bypassed the standard protocol.
We need to bypass this problem.
They bypassed the official channels.
The virus bypasses the immune system.
She bypassed the complex math.
We bypassed the crowded terminal.
He bypassed the mandatory training.
The CEO bypassed the board's veto.
Engineers bypassed the faulty sensor.
The policy bypasses local regulations.
We bypassed the traditional hierarchy.
The system bypasses human error.
He bypassed the diplomatic protocol.
The logic bypasses common sense.
They bypassed the lengthy debate.
The radical theory bypasses established dogma.
The surgeon bypassed the blocked artery.
The legislation bypasses constitutional review.
The artist bypassed conventional styles.
The signal bypasses the relay station.
The plan bypasses the middleman.
The code bypasses the firewall.
The argument bypasses the core issue.
Häufige Kollokationen
Idioms & Expressions
"bypass the gatekeepers"
to reach a decision-maker directly
She bypassed the gatekeepers to reach the CEO.
professionalEasily Confused
similar root
bypass means to avoid, pass means to go by
I pass the store (go by it) vs I bypass the store (avoid it).
Sentence Patterns
Subject + bypass + object
We bypass the city.
Wortfamilie
Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Verwandt
How to Use It
7
Formality Scale
Häufige Fehler
bypass is a transitive verb
Tips
Context
Use it when you have a choice to skip something.
Memorize It
Mnemonic
BY (near) + PASS (go)
Visual Association
A car taking a side road around a traffic jam.
Word Web
Herausforderung
Use the word in a sentence today.
Wortherkunft
English
Original meaning: To pass by or near
Kultureller Kontext
None
Common in medical and political contexts.
Practice in Real Life
Real-World Contexts
Driving
- take the bypass
Conversation Starters
"Have you ever had to bypass a rule?"
Journal Prompts
Write about a time you bypassed a problem.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
1 FragenYes, it can be a noun (a bypass road).
Teste dich selbst
We ___ the traffic.
Bypass means to go around.
What does bypass mean?
It means to avoid.
Ergebnis: /2
Summary
To bypass is to find a smarter, faster path around an obstacle.
- Means to avoid
- Used for roads
- Used for rules
- Regular verb
Context
Use it when you have a choice to skip something.
Beispiel
We decided to bypass the heavy traffic by taking the back roads through the village.
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