English, asked by ehtesham107, 10 months ago

please say it(passive banao)​

Answers

Answered by nanuaro
0

Answer:

Explanation:

I pleased to say that

Answered by suchita46
0

Explanation:

How to form a passive sentence

1. Firstly, you need to make the object (from the active sentence) into the new subject.

For example, in “John helped me”, “me” is the object. The subject form of “me” is “I”.

Here is a list of objects and subjects:

me – I

you – You

him / her – He / She

us – We

them – They

2. Then you make the verb passive.

Put the verb “to be” into the same tense as the verb in the active sentence. For example, in the sentence “John helped me”, “helped” is the past tense. Therefore, you need the past simple tense of the verb “to be”, which is “was” or “were”.

“I was…”

Here’s a list of tenses for the verb “to be”:

Present simple – am / are / is

Present continuous – is being / are being

Present perfect – has been / have been

Simple past – was / were

Past continuous – was being / were being

Modals will, can etc – will be, can be etc.

3. Then add the past participle of the verb. For example “gave” – “given”, “help” – “helped”

“I was helped by John.”

“I was given a prescription by the doctor.”

4. If necessary, you can say who did the action. To do this, add “by” at the end of your sentence.

“She was awarded a degree by the University of London.”

When to use the passive voice

As a general rule, speak and write in the active voice. But passive forms can be useful in formal writing (such as scientific reports) when the emphasis is on process and results, rather than on who did the action.

1. To change the focus of a sentence.

Sometimes, the object of the sentence is more important than the subject. We can change the focus of the sentence by changing an active sentence into a passive sentence. For example, in the following sentence, the focus is on beautiful designs and colours – not on who creates or chooses them.

“Our beautiful designs are created by a team of experts. The colours are carefully chosen to blend in with the surroundings…”

2. If we don’t know who does an action.

“My bicycle has been stolen” – I don’t know who has stolen it.

3. If we don’t want to say who did something.

“The lights were left on all night.” (I don’t want to say that you left the lights on.)

4. If it is obvious who does something.

“I was given a prescription” – I know that only doctors give prescriptions, so I don’t need to add “by the doctor”.

“He was arrested” I know that the police arrest people, so I don’t need to add “by the police”.

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