English, asked by ck1057236, 8 months ago

i didnot pay the bill active and passive voice​

Answers

Answered by preetygirl97
1

Answer:

Passive voice: Has the work been finished by you? ... The primary auxiliary verbs do, does or did does not appear in the passive form. The verbs has, have, had, will, shall, can, may etc., do not change their position at the beginning of the sentence when the active voice is changed to the passive voice.

Answered by abhirwt2008
1

Answer:

What are active and passive voice?

Active and passive voice are two ways of describing how sentences create relationships between actors, actions, and objects of actions. Sentences in active voice put those elements in this order: Actor + Action + Object of Action. Sentences in passive voice put those elements in a different order, and sometimes even leave out the actor element: Object of Action + Action (+ Actor).

In other words, active voice focuses on whodidwhat while passive voice focuses on whathad something done to it.

How can I tell if my sentence is in active or passive voice?

To identify whether a sentence is active or passive, identify whether the sentence’s subject is the actor or the object of action:

Example: She made many mistakes.

The subject, she, is the actor who makes the mistakes.

Active: The subject of the sentence performs the sentence’s action.

\cdots\cdots\cdots\cdots\cdots⋯ ⋯ ⋯ ⋯ ⋯

Example: Many mistakes were made by her.

The subject, many mistakes, are the result of an action taken by a different actor (in this case, her).

Passive: The subject of the sentence has the action performed on it.

There’s also a more technical way of distinguishing between active and passive voice. Grammatically, identifying active and passive voice is a matter of figuring out what form the sentence’s main verb is in. In the passive voice, the main verb is always a combination of the verbbe and the past participle of another verb.

Example: Many mistakes were [verb be] made [past participle of make] by her.

Example: The table was [verb be] set [past participle of set] before I arrived.

Example: The survey has been [verb be] sent [past participle of send] to the research participants, and Sandeep will conduct follow-up interviews.

Explanation:

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