Unit 3
Unit 3
Passives
Overview
1. FORM OF THE PASSIVE
We form the passive using be in an appropriate tense or form + the past participle of a transitive verb:
A small sum of money was stolen from the cash box.
They ought to have been punished more severely.
Having been beaten in the semi-final, she flew home the next day.
• In spoken English, we sometimes use get instead of be in the passive:
They got told off for making so much noise.
• However, get + -ed is more common with an active meaning similar to 'become’ in phrases like get
dressed, get married, etc.
1. THE AGENT
Not mentioning the agent
In most passive sentences we have no interest in who or what performs the action. We are
interested in the action itself, who or what is affected by the action, or what is the result of it (see
Overview). In fact, only about 20% of passive sentences mention the agent:
That window has been broken again!
Mentioning the agent
We mention the agent when we think the information is important, especially if we want to say
more about it, for example with a relative clause:
I remember being taken to the fair by my father, who rarely showed any interest in such
things.
The survivors were picked out of the water by a cruise liner which had heard their distress
call.
• The agent is usually introduced with by.
PRACTICE
1. Fill each of the gaps in the following sentences with one of the passive verb phrases
below.
is deemed
could soon be fitted
were charged
has been held
has finally been elected
is expected
being caused
to be printed
is auctioned
being considered
2. Add the appropriate extra information (a-e) to the passive sentences (1-5).
1. The news was leaked to the press by the minister ...................
2. The minister was attacked by protesters, ..................
3. I remember being sent a letter by a man in America ....................
4. The winning goal was scored by Fausto Ferrini .....................
5. A man was run over by a car, ....................
3. Where possible, rewrite each of the following sentences in two different ways, using
a different subject each time. Some sentences may be rewritten only one way.
4. Fill each of the numbered blanks in the following passage with one suitable word.
Twenty-four hours after arriving in the country, I………………… (1) told to leave. The
security police, the country’s largest employer, came to my hotel, politely asked me what I
thought of the city and then recommended that I leave on the morning plane. I asked them why I
was ….................... (2) expelled and they said it was not a question of my being ‘ ………….. (3)
out’, they were simply recommending that I leave. I refused and the problems started. My
passport and plane ticket ……………… (4) stolen from my room after my key ‘disappeared’.
The police shrugged their shoulders and decided not to interview the leather- jacketed youth who
I ……..................... (5) been pressed up against in the lift. For three days I was ………… (6) by
two not very secret policemen everywhere I went. I visited a fellow-journalist whose address I
had…………… (7) given. He lived in a beautiful old house which would ………………..
............... (8) demolished the following year by the government to make way for a block of
‘modern’ flats. Everybody would be …………. (9) in it as soon as it was ready but where they
would live in the meantime had not been ………….. (10) out. Massive taxation was ……..
............... (11) imposed on the people to pay for these supposed improvements. I went back to
the hotel, still ………….. (12) followed by the two policemen, and felt very depressed.
SECTION 2
Infinitives and -ing form passives
2. PASSIVE INFINITIVES
We form the passive infinitive of verbs by putting to be (sometimes to get) in front of the past
participle:
Active Passive
There’s so much to do. There’s so much to be done.
I've got to write this essay before Friday. This essay has got to be written before Friday.
If I'm going to do it by then, I'd better get a move on. If t's going to be done by then, I'd better get a move on.
3. REPORT VERBS
We often use report verbs, e.g. claim, mention, request, point out, with impersonal passive
constructions.
There are three main patterns:
It’s thought by the press that the chairman earns too much. The chairman is thought by the
press to earn too much. There are thought to be disagreements among senior ministers.
• We often introduce a statement with They say, think, believe, etc. or It is said... / One knows...,
etc. meaning ‘People generally think, believe, etc. ...’: It’s thought that carrots improve
eyesight. (= Carrots are believed to improve eyesight.)
PRACTICE
2. Finish each of the following sentences in such , a way that it is as similar as possible to
the sentence before it.
Example: Many people believe that Stonehenge was built as some kind of time-keeping device.
Stonehenge is believed by many people to have been built as some kind of time-keeping
device.
a) They made me tell them everything I knew.
I..............................................................
b) Nobody ever let me study the piano at school.
I .............................................................
c) It is often said that Shakespeare never revised anything he wrote.
Shakespeare ...........................................
d) There were once thought to be canals on Mars.
It ............................................................
e) From what we understand, there was an attack last night in the vicinity of the beach.
There is ..................................................
f) It’s a widespread assumption that George was wrongly accused.
George ...................................................
g) You have to clean these football boots until they shine.
These football boots are ........................
h) Under no circumstances should you cross this line.
This line is …………………………………
3. For each of the sentences, write a new sentence as similar as possible in meaning to the
original sentence, but using the word given.
Example: A lot of people are saying that he’s working undercover, rumoured
Its rumoured that he’s working undercover. / He’s rumoured to be working undercover.
a She wants it to be clear to people that she’s fair.
seen ...............................................................
b He often says to people how much of his success is down to you.
heard ...........................................................
c The theory is that she fell overboard at night and drowned.
fallen .............................................................
d We certainly don’t want any repetition of such a ridiculous spectacle ever again.
repeated .......................................................
e The plan was originally to complete the building by June.
due …………………………………………
f When I was a child, I was never allowed to play with the children next door.
let ..................................................................