Pass"port (), n. [F. passeport, orig., a permission to leave a port or to sail into it; passer to pass + port a port, harbor. See Pass, and Port a harbor.]

1.

Permission to pass; a document given by the competent officer of a state, permitting the person therein named to pass or travel from place to place, without molestation, by land or by water.

Caution in granting passports to Ireland. Clarendon.

2.

A document carried by neutral merchant vessels in time of war, to certify their nationality and protect them from belligerents; a sea letter.

3.

A license granted in time of war for the removal of persons and effects from a hostile country; a safe-conduct.

Burrill.

4.

Figuratively: Anything which secures advancement and general acceptance.

Sir P. Sidney.

His passport is his innocence and grace. Dryden.

 

© Webster 1913.