English, asked by Jasmine8192, 8 months ago

Bring a cup of tea in Passive voice​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4

\huge\boxed{\fcolorbox{orange}{red}{Answer}}</p><p>

Let a cup of tea be brought✓✓

\huge\underline\mathfrak\pink{♡Active\:Voice♡}

A verb is in the Active voice when its form shows that the person or thing denoted by the subject does something; or is the doer of the active.

Example

  • Ram helps Sita.
  • The chemist will have closed the shop by eight o'clock.
  • My father bought a car.

\huge\underline\mathfrak\pink{♡Passive\:Voice♡}

A verb is in passive voice when its form shows that something is done to the person or thing denoted by the subject.

Example

  • Sita is helped by Ram.
  • The shop will have been closed by the chemist by eight o'clock.
  • A car was brought by her father.

Important points:-

  • A verb is in the active voice when the person or thing denoted by the subject is "doer" of the action.

  • A verb is in the passive voice when the person or thing denoted by subject is the "receiver" of the action.

Structure of active voice sentence:-

  • Subject+verb+object

Structure of passive voice sentence:-

  • Object+verb+by+subject

Answered by Anonymous
0

 \huge \mathcal \blue{&gt;&gt; Answer &lt;  &lt;  }

Let a cup of tea be bought

 \huge \mathcal \blue{&gt;&gt; Explanation&lt;&lt; \: }

 \large \mathfrak \red{Active \:  \:  voice:-}

When the subject of a sentence performs the verb’s action, we say that the sentence is in the active voice. Sentences in the active voice have a strong, direct, and clear tone. Here are some short and straightforward examples of active voice.

 \large \mathfrak \red{Active  \:  \: voice \:  \:  examples:-}

  • Monkeys adore bananas.
  • The cashier counted the money.
  • The dog chased the squirrel.

All three sentences have a basic active voice construction: subject, verb, and object. The subject monkey performs the action described by adore. The subject the cashier performs the action described by counted. The subject the dog performs the action described by chased. The subjects are doing, doing, doing—they take action in their sentences. The active voice reminds us of the popular Nike slogan, “Just Do It.”

 \large \mathfrak \red{Passive \:  \:  voice:-}

A sentence is in the passive voice, on the other hand, when the subject is acted on by the verb. The passive voice is always constructed with a conjugated form of to be plus the verb’s past participle. Doing this usually generates a preposition as well. That sounds much more complicated than it is—passive voice is actually quite easy to detect. For these examples of passive voice, we will transform the three active sentences above to illustrate the difference.

 \large \mathfrak \red{Passive \:  \:  voice  \:  \: examples:-}

  • Bananas are adored by monkeys.
  • The money was counted by the cashier.
  • The squirrel was chased by the dog.

Let’s take a closer look at the first pair of sentences, “Monkeys adore bananas” and “Bananas are adored by monkeys.” The active sentence consists of monkeys (subject) + adore (verb) + bananas (object). The passive sentence consists of bananas (object) + are adored (a form of to be plus the past participle adored) + by (preposition) + monkeys (subject). Making the sentence passive flipped the structure and necessitated the preposition by. In fact, all three of the transformed sentences above required the addition of by.

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