THE PASSIVE VOICE
www.edu.xunta.gal › centros › iesaugadalaxe• the object of the active voice sentence becomes the subject of the passive voice sentence. • we change the main verb of the active voice sentence into the passive voice. The tense remains unchanged. The passive verb is formed by putting the verb TO BE into the same tense as the active verb
THE PASSIVE VOICE - INGLÉS
inglescarmelitaslb.files.wordpress.com › 2011 › 03ENGLISH GRAMMAR The Passive Voice 1 THE PASSIVE VOICE INTRODUCTION The passive of an active tense is formed by putting the verb to be into the same tense as the active verb and adding the past participle of the active verb. The subject of the active verb becomes the ‘agent’ of the passive verb. The agent is very often not mentioned.
Lesson 15: Passive Voice
2qdocg2za8g336a8w21fo83z-wpengine.netdna-ssl.compassive voice with these, because there is no object: The car slowed down. He is running away. Summary In the active voice, the subject of the sentence DOES the action. In the passive voice, the subject of the sentence is acted upon. The passive voice is formed by a form of the verb TO BE + past participle of the main verb.
The Passive Voice - Perfect English Grammar
www.perfect-english-grammar.com › support-filesThe Passive Voice. Let’s look at this sentence: I drank two cups of coffee. This is an activesentence and it has the subject first (the person or thing that does the verb), followed by the verb, and finally the object (the person or thing that the action happens to). So, in this example, the subject is 'I', the verb is 'drank' and the object is 'two cups of coffee'.