Hi guys..
Are you ready to learn about the passive voice?
If you have, let's immediately read that lesson right now!
Hopefully you can make a sentence passive voice well after reading my primbon's.
Happy reading!
Passive Voice
The passive voice is less usual than the active voice. The active voice is the "normal" voice. But sometimes we need the passive voice. In this lesson we look at how to construct the passive voice, when to use it and how to conjugate it.
Construction of the Passive Voice
The structure of the passive voice is very simple:
subject + auxiliary verb (be) + main verb (past participle)
The main verb is always in its past participle form.
subject + auxiliary verb (be) + main verb (past participle)
The main verb is always in its past participle form.
Look at these examples:
subject | auxiliary verb (to be) | main verb (past participle) | ||
Water | is | drunk | by everyone. | |
100 people | are | employed | by this company. | |
I | am | paid | in euro. | |
We | are | not | paid | in dollars. |
Are | they | paid | in yen? |
Use of the Passive Voice
We use the passive when:
- we want to make the active object more important
- we do not know the active subject
subject | verb | object | |
give importance to active object (President Kennedy) | President Kennedy | was killed | by Lee Harvey Oswald. |
active subject unknown | My wallet | has been stolen. | ? |
Note that we always use by to introduce the passive object (Fish are eaten by cats).
Look at this sentence:
- He was killed with a gun.
Normally we use by to introduce the passive object. But the gun is not the active subject. The gun did not kill him. He was killed by somebody with a gun. In the active voice, it would be: Somebody killed him with a gun. The gun is the instrument. Somebody is the "agent" or "doer".
Conjugation for the Passive Voice
We can form the passive in any tense. In fact, conjugation of verbs in the passive tense is rather easy, as the main verb is always in past participle form and the auxiliary verb is always be. To form the required tense, we conjugate the auxiliary verb. So, for example:
- present simple: It is made
- present continuous: It is being made
- present perfect: It has been made
Here are some examples with most of the possible tenses:
infinitive | to be washed | |
simple | present | It is washed. |
past | It was washed. | |
future | It will be washed. | |
conditional | It would be washed. | |
continuous | present | It is being washed. |
past | It was being washed. | |
future | It will be being washed. | |
conditional | It would be being washed. | |
perfect simple | present | It has been washed. |
past | It had been washed. | |
future | It will have been washed. | |
conditional | It would have been washed. | |
perfect continuous | present | It has been being washed. |
past | It had been being washed. | |
future | It will have been being washed. | |
conditional | It would have been being washed. |