English, asked by vanisaru13, 10 months ago

It was a disembodied voice at first change into passive voice ​

Answers

Answered by panesarh989
0

Answer:

Two "voices" occur in English grammar: active voice and passive voice. The difference is subtle at first, but it's easy to master once the grammarian understands the basics. Examine the subject and the main verb in the two sentences below:

(A) The boy hit the ball.

(B) The ball was hit. (Or, "The ball was hit by the boy").

In sentence A, we might ask ourselves, what does the hitting? The answer is the subject, boy. That subject is actively performing the verb; it is actively "doing" the verb hit to a direct object (the ball). This virtuous sentence is in active voice.

In sentence B, we might ask ourselves what is the subject? (ball.) What is the subject doing? (Nothing.) The subject is not hitting anything else. So who exactly is doing the verb to hit? It is not clear unless we stick a prepositional phrase "by the boy" on the end of the sentence. The subject is passively sitting, doing nothing, while some outside agent performs the action (hitting). Since the subject of the sentence is passive grammatically, this sentence is passive voice.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Voice can't be changed as the verb is intransitive.

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