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The phrase "actually passed" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that something has truly occurred or been completed, often in contrast to what might have been expected or assumed.
Example: "Despite the rumors, the legislation actually passed in the final vote."
Alternatives: "in fact passed" or "truly passed".
Exact(58)
He actually passed Brady.
Has this actually passed yet?
For instance, this week the U.S. Senate actually passed something.
I actually passed on jerk chicken for that!
Yet only New York State has actually passed one.
He was only 51 and he actually passed away six days after I took that portrait".
It actually passed simulated crash tests, and has a 5-m.p.h.
Last year, they actually passed for 12 more first downs than they did the year before.
Only eight of them actually passed laws, but more will follow.
"But to my horror I actually passed the exam," he said.
Similar(1)
Depends if anything actually passes the House.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com