Level: beginner
Transitive verbs have both active and passive forms:
Active | Passive |
---|---|
The hunter killed the lion. | The lion was killed by the hunter. |
Someone has cleaned the windows. | The windows have been cleaned. |
Passive forms are made up of the verb be with a past participle:
Subject | be | Past participle | Adverbial |
---|---|---|---|
English | is | spoken | all over the world. |
The windows | have been | cleaned. | |
Lunch | was being | served. | |
The work | will be | finished | soon. |
They | might have been | invited | to the party. |
If we want to show the person or thing doing the action, we use by:
She was attacked by a dangerous dog.
The money was stolen by her husband.
- Active and passive voice 1
- Active and passive voice 2
- Active and passive voice 3
Level: intermediate
The passive infinitive is made up of to be with a past participle:
The doors are going to be locked at ten o'clock.
You shouldn't have done that. You ought to be punished.
We sometimes use the verb get with a past participle to form the passive:
Be careful with that glass. It might get broken.
Peter got hurt in a crash.
We can use the indirect object as the subject of a passive verb:
Active | Passive |
---|---|
I gave him a book for his birthday. | He was given a book for his birthday. |
Someone sent her a cheque for a thousand euros. |
She was sent a cheque for a thousand euros. |
We can use phrasal verbs in the passive:
Active | Passive |
---|---|
They called off the meeting. | The meeting was called off. |
His grandmother looked after him. | He was looked after by his grandmother. |
They will send him away to school. | He will be sent away to school. |
- Active and passive voice 4
- Active and passive voice 5
Level: advanced
Some verbs which are very frequently used in the passive are followed by the to-infinitive:
be supposed to | be expected to | be asked to | be told to |
be scheduled to | be allowed to | be invited to | be ordered to |
John has been asked to make a speech at the meeting.
You are supposed to wear a uniform.
The meeting is scheduled to start at seven.
- Active and passive voice 6
- Active and passive voice 7
Hello dipakrgandhi,
It's important to recognise the communicative function here, as it is not the same for all of these sentences.
When we are describing a fact in the world, we can use these sentences:
All of these sentences are correct. For example, a hotel might say this to its guests:
However, sometimes the function is not simply to describe a fact. For example, Your suggestions are welcome has the function of encouraging people to make suggestions.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Rsb,
'delay' is a transitive verb, so I'm afraid the first sentence is not correct. If you look up the word in the dictionary, you'll see some useful example sentences.
The second sentence is a bit awkward in standard British English, but its use of 'delayed' is correct.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
Actually, delay has several meanings! For the meaning of 'to make something late', it's only transitive (see the second meaning of delay in the Cambridge Dictionary). It's not intransitive or ergative for this meaning.
About the arrive phrase, it should be: The employee's cab was delayed (in) arriving at the office. You can use it with or without in. It has the same meaning.
Using 'to + verb' (to arrive at the office) doesn't work here, unless you want to show the purpose of the delay (e.g. The event was delayed, to give us more time to prepare).
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
Delay is a noun and a verb but not an adjective, so we should use the -ed form here: The cab was delayed.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Rsb,
I just wanted to point out that Jonathan didn't say that 'delayed' is a noun -- he said that 'delay' is a noun. In this sentence, 'delayed' is an adjective.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Rsb,
I'm afraid that isn't correct. I'd suggest you study the example sentences you can find in a few online dictionaries -- I think that should clarify to you how it is used.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
Yes, that's right! The sentence has those two meanings. Note though that the noun cab needs an article before it (probably the).
I don't understand what you mean by 'what kind of noun'. Do you want to know the meaning, or whether the noun is countable or uncountable? If so, I'd recommend using the dictionary for both of these. Have a look at these Cambridge Dictionary pages for delay and shift.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
OK, I see now! In those dictionary pages, after noun, it shows C if it's countable, U if it's uncountable, and C and U if it's both. Delay and shift are abstract things.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi eager2know,
I think normally, we'd understand another table as the object of the active voice sentence. We'd understand the phrase for this class as referring to the action of repairing, and it isn't part of the object.
But, we can understand it another way: the object is another table for this class. In this case, the table is for the class (while in the other meaning above, 'repairing' is for the class). It's a small difference in meaning, though, and both of your passive sentences mean pretty much the same thing.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
Yes! We can understand this sentence both ways.
But, the second one (broken = adjective) is more likely, because of the tense in your sentence. The first one is a passive action in the present simple. The present simple usually shows something that is true in the present and is relatively unchanging, or is a regularly occurring action. But the action of breaking a chair is short and usually not a regularly occurring action.
Instead, to describe an action that you are seeing right now, we'd use the present continuous: The chair is being broken. (Or: The chair is breaking). Alternatively, if we can see the broken chair, then the action has already happened and we'd use the present perfect or past simple: The chair has been broken / The chair was broken. (Or: The chair has broken. / The chair broke.)
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
Yes :) The past tense sentence has the two different meanings you mentioned. And that's right - break is an ergative verb.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rsb,
Yes, that's right. Simple sentences are sentences that have only one clause. Simple tenses are tenses that are not continuous. Both the examples you mentioned are simple sentences and have simple tenses.
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello bakh.sh85,
No, that's not a passive form. To make a passive, you need to use be + past participle. It's possible to replace 'be' with 'get' or 'become', but you still need a past participle, and in your sentence 'angry' is an adjective, not a past participle.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Sir
Could you kindly clarify the following sentence.
The patient entered the clinic to meet the doctor. Here the main verb is enter and the voice of the sentence is active. Then how do make it passive? The clinic was entered by the patient....can it be said? It sounds a little strange. Please help.
Thank you
Hello amrita_enakshi,
Your sentence is correct - that is how the passive would be formed for this sentence. You're also right that it sounds strange and it's not a sentence we would normally form with passive voice. We do sometimes use 'enter' as a passive verb form but not when we add the agent with 'by'. Thus, the sentence is grammatically correct but clumsy stylistically, I would say.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Rsb,
Yes, 'get' can be used in the place of 'be' in passive forms in informal situations. I'd suggest you think of the verbs 'be' and 'get' in the first pairs of sentences in your examples not as active but rather as link verbs.
Link verbs establish a link between a noun and an adjective or other noun -- they don't have objects (remember that transitive verbs by definition have an object).
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Rafaela1,
Yes! These are both grammatically correct. (Is Russian Blue a cat?)
In British English, it's also common to use the present perfect for the second sentence: She's disappeared / She has disappeared.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Nuro,
I don't think the phrase 'are branded' is a passive verb here. Instead, it's the verb 'be' and the adjective 'branded' (which is formed from the verb 'brand'). If it were a passive verb, it would be in the past ('were branded') because that is the time that the words were spoken and entered the speaker's memory.
There is no need for an agent to be included in a passive sentence; indeed, much of the time, the whole point of a passive sentence is not to mention the agent. When I think about the sentence 'The words he spoke as he left us were branded in my memory', I'd understand the situation to be what caused his words to make such an impression on this person -- in other words, the situation is the agent.
I hope this helps.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Yap,
'Being' here indicates that the form is continuous:
The continuous passive form is used just as other continuous forms are used: when something is in progress and is interrupted by another action, for example.
Your question is not really about passive voice as all three options are passive forms. What you are asking is when to use the past simple (1), the present perfect (2) and the past continuous (3). The fact they are all passives does not change the differences between these three forms.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Nuro,
It's true that you can use 'with' to talk about a tool in a passive sentence, but that's not the only use of 'with'. It is a very common word with many uses. Here it describes the reason for the action -- see the 'with preposition (CAUSE)' entry (the eighth heading in purple) on the page I linked to for more examples.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Nuro,
I think you would probably see the passive sentence in most sports journalism, but your sentence is perfect -- great work!
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Rsb,
Both forms (want sb to do and want sb doing) are grammatically possible.
Generally, I think we use want sb doing when we are talking about an existing situation which we want to continue or stop:
We also use this to describe an imagined situation in the future which we hope to find or avoid:
The infinitive form (want sb to do) generally refers to a particular action in the future;
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team