The voice used to indicate that the grammatical subject of the verb is the recipient (not the source) of the action denoted by the verb.
1The passive voice has been used repeatedly: a lot has been said.
2To farm was an occupation easily parsed-subjunctivemood, past tense, passive voice!
3But in a case of illness we require the passive voice.
4The passive voice was there for Arthur, and it understood.
5Her use of the passive voice-"Cabinshave been booked"-wasracially typical.
6Maybe the problem is that passive voice.
7Turning to the passive voice, we get-
8However, as discussed earlier, for shorter headlines, subheads, and bullet points, passive voice can be useful in some cases.
9The aim, presumably, was to shake us out of our habit of using the passive voice to avoid responsibility.
10Only the first, then, of each pair can have an object or can be used in the passive voice.
11Use active voice ("He optimized the copy") for copy, rather than passive voice ("The copy was optimized").
12I notice the descent into passive voice; also some disturbing double takes from around the table, from Shona and Gustaffson.
13The +object complement+ of a verb in the +active voice+ becomes the +subject+ when the verb is changed to the + passive voice.+
14Passive voice is less engaging and more confusing to your reader.
15Past Perfect Tense-PassiveVoice
16Future Perfect Tense-PassiveVoice
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Translations for passive voice