Save him change in passive voice
Answers
Answer:
he is saved by me ..........
Explanation:
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Answer:
We need more to the sentence. We need, say, the word “I” as
the subject of the active voice: “I save him every Thursday when we play dodge ball” is an ordinary sentence. “Dodge ball can be pretty violent, so I save him from getting hit hard by the ball during gym class.”
Or, simply: “ I save him, ” which is a complete sentence with less information.
Passive voice: He is saved by me.
In the Passive Voice, the subject of the sentence in the Active Voice changes to a correct other form which is not the same subject.
Active Voice I save him. Subject is “I” and is the one doing the action, the principal actor.
The direct object of the verb “to save” is who or what do “I” save? HIM is the direct object.
In this case, you convert the direct object “”him” into the proper form for the SUBJECT : “ He” ~
You change the Infinitive generic form of the Verb in the Active Voice “to save” to the Passive Voice form of the Verb “to be saved”: in this case—”is saved.”
You take the Subject of the Active Voice here “He” and make it an Object, in this case, the Object of the preposition “ by”~
“He”—used to be “him” which was the Direct Object in the Active Voice, but now it is in the correct form “He” to be the Subject 0f the Passive voice.
“I save” becomes “He is saved”: new subject in correct form plus verb in Passive Voice~
by me—”I” the proper form of the personal pronoun as Subject becomes the correct form to be an Object
although not the Direct Object, the who or what acted upon by the Active Voice Subject,
but, instead, it becomes “the object of the preposition “ by” as in “ by me”~
Thus “I save him “ in the Active Voice is tweaked to become “He is saved by me” in the Passive Voice.
This explanation may well be too abstract or complicated. If it is, so sorry
Explanation: