Active and Passive Voice in English Grammar

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THE PASSIVE
A
CTIVE
 
VS
. P
ASSIVE
 
          
subject
 
verb
 
object
Active: (a) 
Mary
     
helped
     
the boy.
  
subject
  
verb
Passive: (b) 
The boy 
 
    
was 
helped   
   
by Mary.
In the passive, 
the object 
of an 
active
 verb becomes
the 
subject
 
of the 
passive
 verb: 
the boy 
in (a) becomes
the 
subject
 of the passive verb in (b).
Notice that the 
subject
 of an 
active
 verb 
follows
 
by
 
in
a passive sentence. The 
noun
 that follows 
by
 
is called
the “
agent
." In (b): 
Mary 
is the agent.
Sentences (a) and (b) have the 
same
 meaning.
Passive:      
be 
+  
past participle
 
(c) He 
is
      
helped
 
by her.
 
He 
was      
 
helped
 
by her.
 
He 
will 
be 
 
helped
 
by her.
Form of the passive: 
be + past participle
Active
: (d) An accident 
happened.
   Passive
: (e) (none)
Only 
transitive
 verbs (verbs 
that can be followed by an
object
) are used in the passive. It is 
not possible 
to use
intransitive verbs 
(such as 
happen, sleep, come, seem,
die
)
 in the passive. 
(See Appendix Chart A-1.)
T
ENSE
 F
ORMS
 
OF
 
THE
 P
ASSIVE
 
*The progressive forms of the
 
present perfect, past
perfect, 
and 
future perfect 
are 
rarely
 used in the 
passive
.
( j) 
Was
 
the boy 
helped 
by Mary? 
(k) 
Has
 
the boy 
been helped 
by Mary? 
In the 
question
 form of passive verbs, an
auxiliary
 verb 
precedes
 the subject.
Exercise 4, p. 213.
2. Customers are served by waitresses and waiters.
3. The lesson is going to be explained by the teacher.
4. The farmer’s wagon was being pulled by two horses.
5. Yoko will be invited to the party byToshi.
6. That report is being prepared by Alex.
7. The book had been returned to the library by Kathy.
8. Several public buildings have been designed by Miriam.
9. I won’t be fooled by his tricks.
10. That note wasn’t written by me. Was it written by Jim?
11. Is that course taught by Prof. Shapiro? No, it isn’t taught by him.
12. Those papers haven’t been signed by Mrs. Andrews yet. Have they been signed by Mr.
Andrews yet?
13. Anwar gave the speech.
14. The teaching assistant is going to correct our assignments.
15. Did Thomas Edison invent the electric light bulb?
16. Most drivers don’t obey the speed limit on Highway 5.
17. Has the building manager informed you of the rent increase?
U
SING
 
THE
 P
ASSIVE
(a) Rice 
is grown 
in India.
(b) Our house 
was built 
in 1980.
(c) This olive oil 
was imported 
from Crete.
Usually the passive is used 
without
 a 
by-phrase
. The passive
is most frequently used when it is 
not known 
or 
not important
to know exactly who performs an action.
In (a): Rice is grown in India by 
people, by farmers, by
someone.
It is 
not known or important 
to know exactly who grows rice
in India.
Examples (a), (b), and (c) illustrate the 
most common use 
of
the passive, i.e., 
without the by-phrase
.
 (d) My aunt made this rug. (
active
)
 
If the speaker 
knows
 who 
performs
 an action, usually the
active
 is used, as in (d).
(e) This rug 
was made 
by my aunt.
That rug 
was made 
by my mother.
(f) 
Life on the Mississippi 
was written 
by Mark Twain.
Sometimes
, even when the speaker 
knows
 who 
performs
 an
action, he/she 
chooses to use the passive 
with the 
by-phrase
in order to 
focus
 attention on the 
subject
 of a sentence.
In (e): The focus of attention is on 
two rugs
.
In (f): The focus is on the 
book
, but the by-phrase is included
because it 
contains important information
.
T
HE
 P
ASSIVE
 F
ORM
 
OF
 M
ODALS
 
AND
 P
HRASAL
M
ODALS
Passive form: 
  
 modal* +
 
 
be
 
+ 
 
past participle
(a) Tom 
  
will
 
  
be 
 
invited
     
to the picnic.
(b) The window
 
 
can’t
 
  
be 
 
opened
.
(c) Children 
  
should
 
  
be 
 
taught
 
to respect their
elders.
(d) 
   
May
 I 
  
be 
 
excused
 
from class?
(e) This book
  
had better 
 
be 
 
returned
 
to the library
before Friday.
(f) This letter 
  
ought to 
 
be
 
 
sent
 
before June 1st.
(g) Mary 
  
has to 
  
be 
 
told
 
about our change
in plans.
(h) Fred 
  
is supposed to
 
 be 
 
told
 
about the meeting.
Past-passive form
:
  
 
modal
 + 
 
have been 
 
+ 
pp
.
(i) The letter
 
 
should
 
 
have been
 
sent
 
last week.
(j) This house 
 
must
 
  
have been 
 
built
 
over 200
years ago.
(k) Eric 
 
couldn’t 
 
have been 
 
offered
 
the job.
(l) Jill 
  
ought to 
 
have been 
 
invited
 
to the
party.
N
ON
-P
ROGRESSIVE
 P
ASSIVE
 ( 
a ) 
The door is 
old
.
( b ) The door is 
green
.
( c ) The door is 
locked
.
In (a) and (b): 
old 
and 
green 
are 
adjectives
. They 
describe
the door.
In (c): 
locked
 
is a 
past participle
. It is 
used
 as an 
adjective
.
It 
describes
 the door.
 (d ) I 
locked
 the door five minutes ago.
( e ) The door 
was locked 
by me five minutes ago.
( f ) Now the door 
is locked
.
( g ) Ann 
broke
 the window yesterday.
(h ) The window 
was broken 
by Ann.
( i ) Now the window 
is broken
.
When the 
passive
 form is used to 
describe an existing
situation or state
, as in (c), (f), and (i), it is called the “
non-
progressive passive
.” In the non-progressive:
no action 
is taking place; the action happened earlier.
• there is 
no by-phrase
.
• the past participle 
functions as an adjective
.
( j ) I 
am interested 
in
 
Chinese art.
( k ) He 
is satisfied 
with
 
his job.
(I ) Ann 
is married 
to
 
Alex.
Prepositions
 other than 
by
 
can 
follow
 
non-progressive
passive verbs
. (See Chart 11 -6.)
(m) I don’t know where I am. I 
am lost
.
(n ) I can’t find my purse. It 
is gone
.
(o ) I 
am finished 
with 
my work.
( p ) I 
am done 
with 
my work.
Sentences (m) through (p) are examples of 
idiomatic
usage of the passive 
form in common, everyday English.
These sentences 
have no equivalent active sentence
 T
HE
 P
ASSIVE
 
WITH
 G
ET
Get 
+ 
Adjective
(a) 
I’m 
getting hungry
. 
Let’s eat soon.
(b) I stopped working because I 
got sleepy
.
Get
 
may be 
followed
 by 
certain 
adjectives
. 
Get 
gives the idea
of change 
— the idea of 
becoming
, 
beginning
 to be, 
growing
 to
be.
In (a): 
I ’m getting hungry 
= I wasn’t hungry before, but now
I’m beginning to be hungry.
Common adjectives that follow 
get:
 
angry 
 
cold 
 
fat 
 
hungry
 
 
 
quiet 
 
tall
anxious 
 
comfortable
 
 full 
 
late 
 
ready 
 
thirsty… etc.
 
Get + Past Participle
(c) I stopped working because I 
got tired
.
(d) They 
are 
getting married
 
next month.
Get 
may also be 
followed
 by 
a past participle
. The 
past
participle functions as an 
adjective
; it describes the
subject.
The 
passive
 with 
get 
is common in 
spoken English
, but
not in formal writing.
P
ARTICIPIAL
 A
DJECTIVES
The problem confuses the students.
(a) It is a 
confusing
 problem.
The students are confused by the problem.
(b) They are 
confused
 students.
The 
present participle 
serves as an 
adjective
 with an 
active
meaning
. The 
noun
 it modifies 
performs an action
.
In (a): The noun 
problem
 
does
 
something
; it 
confuses.
Thus, it is described as a “
confusing problem
.”
The 
past participle 
serves 
as an 
adjective
 with a 
passive
meaning.
In (b): The 
students
 are 
confused 
by 
something
. Thus, they are
described as “
confused students
.”
— The story 
amuses 
the children.
(c) It is an 
amusing
 story.
— The children 
are amused 
by the story.
(d) They are 
amused
 children.
In (c): The noun 
story
 
performs the action
.
In (d): The noun 
children
 
receive the action
.
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Explore the concept of active and passive voice in English grammar with examples and explanations. Learn how the subject and object positions change between active and passive sentences, along with tense forms and common usage scenarios. Practice exercises included to reinforce learning.

  • Grammar
  • English
  • Active voice
  • Passive voice
  • Tense forms

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  1. THE PASSIVE

  2. ACTIVE VS. PASSIVE subject verb object the boy. Active: (a) Mary helped subject verb Passive: (b) The boy was helped by Mary. In the passive, the object of an active verb becomes the subject of the passive verb: the boy in (a) becomes the subject of the passive verb in (b). Notice that the subject of an active verb follows by in a passive sentence. The noun that follows by is called the agent." In (b): Mary is the agent. Sentences (a) and (b) have the same meaning.

  3. Passive: be + past participle (c) He is helped by her. He was helped by her. He will be helped by her. Form of the passive: be + past participle Active: (d) An accident happened. Passive: (e) (none) Only transitive verbs (verbs that can be followed by an object) are used in the passive. It is not possible to use intransitive verbs (such as happen, sleep, come, seem, die) in the passive. (See Appendix Chart A-1.)

  4. TENSE FORMS OF THE PASSIVE Active Mary helps the boy. Passive The boy is helped by Mary. (a) simple present (b) present progressive Mary is helping the boy. The boy is being helped by Mary. (c) present perfect* (d) simple past Mary has helped the boy. The boy has been helped by Mary. Mary helped the boy. The boy was helped by Mary. (e) past progressive (f) past perfect* Mary was helping the boy. The boy was being helped by Mary. Mary had helped the boy. The boy had been helped by Mary. (9) simple future Mary will help the boy. The boy will be helped by Mary. (h) be going to Mary is going to help the boy. Mary will have helped the boy. The boy is going to be helped by Mary. The boy will have been helped by Mary. (i) future perfect*

  5. *The progressive forms of the present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect are rarely used in the passive. ( j) Was the boy helped by Mary? (k) Has the boy been helped by Mary? In the question form of passive verbs, an auxiliary verb precedes the subject.

  6. Exercise 4, p. 213. 2. Customers are served by waitresses and waiters. 3. The lesson is going to be explained by the teacher. 4. The farmer s wagon was being pulled by two horses. 5. Yoko will be invited to the party byToshi. 6. That report is being prepared by Alex. 7. The book had been returned to the library by Kathy. 8. Several public buildings have been designed by Miriam. 9. I won t be fooled by his tricks. 10. That note wasn t written by me. Was it written by Jim? 11. Is that course taught by Prof. Shapiro? No, it isn t taught by him. 12. Those papers haven t been signed by Mrs. Andrews yet. Have they been signed by Mr. Andrews yet? 13. Anwar gave the speech. 14. The teaching assistant is going to correct our assignments. 15. Did Thomas Edison invent the electric light bulb? 16. Most drivers don t obey the speed limit on Highway 5. 17. Has the building manager informed you of the rent increase?

  7. USING THE PASSIVE (a) Rice is grown in India. (b) Our house was built in 1980. (c) This olive oil was imported from Crete. Usually the passive is used without a by-phrase. The passive is most frequently used when it is not known or not important to know exactly who performs an action. In (a): Rice is grown in India by people, by farmers, by someone. It is not known or important to know exactly who grows rice in India. Examples (a), (b), and (c) illustrate the most common use of the passive, i.e., without the by-phrase.

  8. (d) My aunt made this rug. (active) If the speaker knows who performs an action, usually the active is used, as in (d). (e) This rug was made by my aunt. That rug was made by my mother. (f) Life on the Mississippi was written by Mark Twain. Sometimes, even when the speaker knows who performs an action, he/she chooses to use the passive with the by-phrase in order to focus attention on the subject of a sentence. In (e): The focus of attention is on two rugs. In (f): The focus is on the book, but the by-phrase is included because it contains important information.

  9. THE PASSIVE FORM OF MODALS AND PHRASAL MODALS Passive form: modal* + be + past participle (a) Tom will be invited to the picnic. (b) The window can t be opened. (c) Children elders. should be taught to respect their (d) May I be excused from class? (e) This book before Friday. had better be returned to the library (f) This letter ought to be sent before June 1st. (g) Mary in plans. has to be told about our change (h) Fred is supposed to be told about the meeting.

  10. Past-passive form: modal + have been + pp. (i) The letter should have been sent last week. (j) This house must years ago. have been built over 200 (k) Eric couldn t have been offered the job. (l) Jill party. ought to have been invited to the

  11. NON-PROGRESSIVE PASSIVE ( a ) The door is old. ( b ) The door is green. ( c ) The door is locked. In (a) and (b): old and green are adjectives. They describe the door. In (c): locked is a past participle. It is used as an adjective. It describes the door.

  12. (d ) I locked the door five minutes ago. ( e ) The door was locked by me five minutes ago. ( f ) Now the door is locked. ( g ) Ann broke the window yesterday. (h ) The window was broken by Ann. ( i ) Now the window is broken. When the passive form is used to describe an existing situation or state, as in (c), (f), and (i), it is called the non- progressive passive. In the non-progressive: no action is taking place; the action happened earlier. there is no by-phrase. the past participle functions as an adjective.

  13. ( j ) I am interested in Chinese art. ( k ) He is satisfied with his job. (I ) Ann is married to Alex. Prepositions other than by can follow non-progressive passive verbs. (See Chart 11 -6.) (m) I don t know where I am. I am lost. (n ) I can t find my purse. It is gone. (o ) I am finished with my work. ( p ) I am done with my work. Sentences (m) through (p) are examples of idiomatic usage of the passive form in common, everyday English. These sentences have no equivalent active sentence

  14. THE PASSIVE WITH GET Get + Adjective (a) I m getting hungry. Let s eat soon. (b) I stopped working because I got sleepy. Get may be followed by certain adjectives. Get gives the idea of change the idea of becoming, beginning to be, growing to be. In (a): I m getting hungry = I wasn t hungry before, but now I m beginning to be hungry. Common adjectives that follow get: angry anxious cold comfortable fat hungry full quiet tall ready thirsty etc. late

  15. Get + Past Participle (c) I stopped working because I got tired. (d) They are getting married next month. Get may also be followed by a past participle. The past participle functions as an adjective; it describes the subject. The passive with get is common in spoken English, but not in formal writing.

  16. PARTICIPIAL ADJECTIVES The problem confuses the students. (a) It is a confusing problem. The students are confused by the problem. (b) They are confused students. The present participle serves as an adjective with an active meaning. The noun it modifies performs an action. In (a): The noun problem does something; it confuses. Thus, it is described as a confusing problem. The past participle serves as an adjective with a passive meaning. In (b): The students are confused by something. Thus, they are described as confused students.

  17. The story amuses the children. (c) It is an amusing story. The children are amused by the story. (d) They are amused children. In (c): The noun story performs the action. In (d): The noun children receive the action.

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