Eron Powell
Eron Powellβ€’

How to Use Passive Voice: Explained in English

Passive voice means the subject receives the action.

  • Active: Sam broke the window.
  • Passive: The window was broken by Sam.

How to Use Passive Voice

  • When the doer is unknown or unimportant: My bike was stolen.
  • For a polite/neutral tone: A mistake was made.
  • Focus on result: Payment has been received.
  • Common in science/news: Samples were tested at 20 Β°C.

Avoid passive voice when it makes longer, unclear sentences.

How to Form (Keep the Original Tense)

  • Present simple: is/are + V3 β†’ Reports are checked daily.
  • Present continuous: is/are being + V3 β†’ Files are being uploaded.
  • Present perfect: has/have been + V3 β†’ The issue has been fixed.
  • Past simple: was/were + V3 β†’ The show was canceled.
  • Future/modals: will/can be + V3 β†’ The visa will be issued next week.

Key Points

  • Can you add by ___? If yes, it's passive voice.
  • Object-first test: If the thing matters more than the doer, use passive.

Bottom line: Passive isn't "bad." Use it on purpose for results/politeness.

Examples by Level

  • A2: The classroom was cleaned last night.
  • B1: New rules are being tested before launch.
  • B2: All interviews were recorded and later transcribed.

FAQs

Q: Is passive voice wrong? A: No! It's a common pattern. It becomes a problem when it hides responsibility or makes sentences complicated.

Q: How can I spot passive quickly? A: Look for a form of "be" + past participle (is made, was chosen) and optionally a by-phrase.

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How to Use Passive Voice: Explained in English | FreeTalk Learner's Dictionary