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Active and Passive Verbs

The document discusses the difference between active and passive verbs. The active voice has the subject performing the action of the verb, while the passive voice has the subject receiving the action of the verb. While active verbs are usually preferable to keep writing concise, the passive voice is acceptable when the agent performing the action is unknown, less important than the recipient of the action, or parallel structure is needed in a series of verbs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views

Active and Passive Verbs

The document discusses the difference between active and passive verbs. The active voice has the subject performing the action of the verb, while the passive voice has the subject receiving the action of the verb. While active verbs are usually preferable to keep writing concise, the passive voice is acceptable when the agent performing the action is unknown, less important than the recipient of the action, or parallel structure is needed in a series of verbs.

Uploaded by

Iaii Moncada
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ACTIVE & PASSIVE VERBS

We can view the action of a sentence in two ways without changing the facts reported.
Example: Mary was kissed by John.
John kissed Mary.

The difference between these two sentences is that the verb of the first is in the passive
voice, whereas the verb of the second is in the active voice. Voice is simply the property
of the verb that shows whether the subject acts (active voice) or is acted upon (passive
voice). A verb with a direct object is in the active voice. When the direct object is
converted into a subject, as in the examples above and below, the verb must be converted
into the passive voice. The subject of an active verb acts; the subject of a passive verb
does not act.

Examples:

Passive Voice Active Voice


The detective was murdered by the butler. The butler murdered the detective.
John is chosen by Priscilla. Priscilla chooses John.
This lesson must be learned by Ed. Ed must learn this lesson.
The concert was enjoyed by everyone. Everyone enjoyed the concert.
The novel’s theme is expressed by this This passage expresses the novel’s
passage. theme.

Note that a verb in passive voice always consists of more than one part:

1) some form of “to be,” and

2) a past participle. Many writers feel that active verbs should be used whenever
possible.

Too many passive verbs make a passage wordy and flabby. The active voice keeps
prose forceful, direct and concise.

However, neither active nor passive voice is used exclusively, and the passive voice
may be preferable when:
1) The agent causing the action is either unknown or omitted.
Examples:

o The house was vandalized.

American University, Academic Support Center, Writing Lab, updated 2009


o Rome was not built in a day.
o The police were totally misled.
o The grammar book had been misplaced among the bedtime stories.

2) The agent is less important than the person or thing acted upon. The writer can
add emphasis in this case by using the passive voice.
Examples:

o Coffee is drunk by more people than any other hot drink. (The
emphasis is on the coffee.)
o More people drink coffee than any other hot drink. (The emphasis
is on the people.)

3) There is a series of verbs and the author wishes to maintain parallelism.


Example:
o The windows had been left open, the old trunk had been ransacked,
and the food had been devoured by rats.

American University, Academic Support Center, Writing Lab, updated 2009

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