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 parisaach
The passive is essentially formed of two parts: 1) the verb 'be' (used as an auxiliary verb) and 2) the past participle of the verb. It's only 1 that changes for tense or subject, so that means you could just list out all the forms of 'be' in the different tenses and then add 2 to the end to get a list.
For example, following the order of the tenses on the present tense page: it is written, it is being written, it has been written, it has been being written. The past tense page: it was written, it was being written, it had been written, it had been being written. Then there are also forms with 'will' and 'would': it will be written, it will be being written, it will have been written, it will have been being written, it would be written, it would be being written, it would have been written and it would have been being written.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Cleo
In the passive sentence, you can include the agent ('the cleaner') by using the word 'by': 'The office has been cleaned by the cleaner'. There is nothing wrong with this, but often we use the passive voice because we consider the agent (in this case, the cleaner) irrelevant or something that we don't want to discuss. So in many cases, people would probably leave out the agent.
But the passive can be used for other reasons, too, and in these cases people might choose to include the agent.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Nidhi
Perhaps 'Will the banks not be worked in regularly?'?
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello miladghasemiofficial
Those are all correct, except for being misspelled (won't, don't). 'they don't help you' is in the present simple, so the closest version in the passive would also be in the present simple -- the second and third versions you give are in the present simple.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello thyngoc1985
When 'yet' is used as an adverb, it usually comes at the end of a sentence, so 1 is better.
Actually, unless it's important to mention that John is the one selling the car, it would be much more common to just say 'The car hasn't been sold yet'.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi AFS,
There are two possibilities:
The first means there is no obligation – it's fine if they are not done.
The second, which is an unusual form but still quite correct means they must not be done. We would usually choose the form must not be rather than have to be not, but it is a correct form.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Ahmed Imam,
Both are indeed possibly correct, though the second one is quite unusual. The first one is a causative structure -- follow the link to see more examples of this. The second could possibly be used to describe, for example, a stage in some kind of social science experiment, but again, this would be quite unusual and perhaps best expressed another way.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Siuyang,
The most common position for the by-phrase is at the end of the sentence, so the most natural options would be as follows:
Sometimes putting the by-phrase at the end separates it too far from the verb, and then we prefer to move it earlier. Thus the second sentence might also be:
It is possible to put the by-phrase in other positions, as in your examples, when we want to emphasise it for some reason. For example, if it were surprising or important for some reason that it is Helen's mum who invites us then we might say:
I hope that helps to clarify it for you.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ataur Rahman,
You can find a summary of the uses of passive voice on these pages:
https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/b1-b2-grammar/passives
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/passive/passive
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Lal,
Many English verbs can be used both transitively and intransitively, and 'grow' is one of them -- this is what [I] or [T] or [I or T] means after each dictionary entry (follow the link to see what I mean).
Yes, in 1, 'grow' is transitive -- any verb in the passive must be transitive, as intransitive verbs aren't used in the passive voice. And yes, 2 is the closest version of 1 in the active voice.
Good work!
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ataur Rahman,
Passive voice is only possible when we have a transitive verb, meaning a verb which has a direct object. Your sentence does not contain such a verb and so no passive is possible.
A more natural way to say this, I think, would be to use 'study' instead of 'read', or to simply say 'What class is he in?' Neither of these sentences have passive forms either.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Mansoor Banglani,
'Grow' here is an intransitive verb (it has no object) and so no passive voice is possible.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team