Passive Voice 2023
Passive Voice 2023
Passive Voice 2023
Where
Active voice: Where did you get it?
Passive voice: Where was it gotten?
Active voice: Where are you sending him?
Passive voice: Where is he being sent?
What
Active voice: What are you eating?
Passive voice: What is being eaten?
Active voice: What do you learn?
Passive voice: What is learnt by you?
Active voice: What have you seen?
Passive voice: What has been seen by you?
Which
Active voice: Which will you get
Passive voice: Which will be gotten?
Active voice: Which are you talking about?
Passive voice: Which is being talked about?
Active voice: Which did you answer?
Passive voice: Which was answered?
Active voice: Which do you want?
Passive voice: which is wanted by you?
Passive + to-infinitive
Some patterns with a verb + object + infinitive/active
participle have a passive equivalent.We can use this
passive pattern with verbs like tell, ask, persuade,
warn, advise, and force and allow,
Examples
Active: Police advise drivers to use an alternative route
Passive: Drivers are advised to use an alternative route.
Active voice: He asked me to send an envelope.
Passive voice: I was asked to send an envelope
Examples
It is thought that the Minister will resign.
It is expected that the company will become profitable in
the New Year.
Verbs which are not used in the passive
Note that only sentences with transitive verbs can be
turned into passive voice. However, some transitive
verbs, too, are seldom used in the passive.
Note that Passive structures are impossible with verbs
like die, arrive, fit, have, lack, resemble, suit, sleep,
stand, sit, rise, appear, live, come, happen, fall,
become, sneeze, cry, leave, seem belong, look, go…
All of the following sentences cannot be turned into
passive voice.
Examples
They have a nice house, (but not A nice house is had
by them.)
My shoes don’t fit me.
He lacks tact
We came here yesterday
He died last year.
We go to Rays English private school
An intransitive verb cannot be passive, but most phrasal
verbs which have an object can be passive
Other advanced points
Deserve, need, require and want can be followed by an
active -ing form structure although the grammatical
subject is the affected participant of the process denoted
by the verb, thus creating a meaning similar to a passive
voice structure:
The picture’s dark. It needs restoring. (similar to: It
should be restored.)
Your jacket wants cleaning. (similar to: It should be
cleaned.)
Note that we can make a passive form of many transitive
verbs two and three-word verbs
Look after
carry out (=put into practice)
disprove of, hold of(=delay)
talk down to(=patronize)
However, some transitive two and three-word verbs are
not used in the passive voice
For example
Brush up on(=revise)
cast (your mind)back (=try to remember),come up
against(=encounter)
Some are only used in the passive voice in certain
senses when it may not be important to mention the
subject.
1.Call(someone) up (=order to join the army etc.,
passive is possible,
= telephone, no passive)
2.call(someone) back (= ask to return,passive is
possible,
=telephone, no passive)
3.Let in (=to allow into a place, passive is
possible)
4.Let out (to allow to leave, passive is possible,
=let out a sound,no passive)
5.Put out (=to put out a statement/light/fire)
Active voice:They put out the fire.
Passive voice: The fire was put out.
Active voice:I put out my hand.
Not my hand was put out
Get as passive auxiliary
Get + past participle can be used to make passive
structures in the same way as be + past participle.
This structure is mostly used in an informal style.It is
often used to talk about events that happen by
accident,unexpectedly,
Pronunciation of ed
The regular past maker ending is pronounced in three
different ways.
These are d, id and t.
The pronunciation ed depends on the last sound of the
infinitive form of the verb.
Rule 1
If the verb ends voiceless consonants like ch, f, k, p, s,
sh, x, ed is pronounced like t
Some regular verbs that end ch
Note that the ed in the following verbs is
pronounced like t
Infinitive Past/past participle
Watch Watched
Reach Reached
Detach Detached
Fetch Fetched
Some regular verbs that end f sound
Note that the ed in the following verbs is pronounced like
t
Infinitive Past/past participle
Cough Coughed
Laugh Laughed
Quaff Quaffed
Scoff Scoffed
Some regular verbs that end k sound
Infinitive Past/p.p
Ask Asked
Look Looked
Talk Talked
Walk Walked
Work Worked
Some regular verbs that end p sound
Note that the ed in the following verbs is pronounced like
t
Infinitive Past/past participle
Help Helped
Jump Jumped
Develop Developed
Drop Dropped
Kidnap Kidnapped
Regular verbs
A regular verb is any verb whose conjugation follows
typical pattern; in other words, a verb following the
normal pattern of inflection is called regular verb.
Regular verbs form their past and past participle form
by the addition of d or ed.
There are thousands of regular verb in English.
1. By adding ed
Infinitive past and p.p meaning
1. Absorb Absorbed Dhuuqid/nuugid
2. Abstain Abstained Iska dayn
3. Accept Accepted yeelid/ aqbalid
4. Add Added Ku darid
5. Adjust Adjusted Isku toosin
6. Administer Administered Maamulid
7. Afford Afforded Awoodid
8. Allow Allowed U ogolaansho
9.Answer Answered Jawaabid
10.Arrest arrested Xabisid
11.Applaud Applauded Sacabayn
12.Ask Asked Waydiin
13.Attack Attacked Weerarid
14.Assess Assessed Qiimayn
15.Assist Assisted Cawaawin
16.Attain Attained Hanasho
17.Attend Attended Xaadirid
18.Attract Attracted Soo jiidasho
19.Avoid Avoided Ka fogaansho
20.Block Blocked Gufayn/jarid
21.Blush Blushed Khajilid
22.Boast Boasted Faanid
23.Boil Boiled Karkarin
Irregular verbs
A verb that does not follow the normal pattern of
inflection is called irregular verb.
NOTE •Burn, dream, kneel, lean, learn, smell, spell, spill and
spoil are all generally regular in American English.
In British English, irregular past tenses and participles with -t are
also quite common.
• Dive is regular in British English, but can be irregular in
American: dive - dived/dove - dived
• The old past participle drunken is used as an adjective in some
expressions (e.g. a drunken argument, drunken
driving), but these are not very common.
• Fit and quit are usually irregular in American English.
fit - fit - fit, quit - quit - quit
• The American past participle of get is either got or gotten
• Hang is regular when used to mean ‘execute by hanging'.
• Prove (regular) has an irregular past participle proven which is
sometimes used instead of proved, especially as an adjective (e.g.
a proven liar).
• Speed can also have regular forms, especially in the
expression speeded up.
Spit has both spit and spat as past tense and participle in
American English.
Abide→ abided → abided=u dulqaadasho