Yes you can.
The cake is baked by the baker.
"You are told" is in the present tense. It is the present passive voice of the verb "to tell."
The present perfect tense of "sing" in passive voice is "has been sung."
The tense present imperative passive is a grammatical form that expresses a command or request in the passive voice in the present tense. It is used to instruct or advise someone to perform a specific action, with the subject of the sentence receiving the action rather than performing it.
To change interrogative present simple active voice sentences into passive voice, you typically move the object of the active sentence to the subject position in the passive sentence, and use a form of "be" along with the past participle of the verb. For example, change "Do you know the answer?" to "Is the answer known by you?"
To convert the present perfect continuous tense into passive voice, use "has been" or "have been" followed by the past participle of the main verb. For example, "They have been cooking" in present perfect continuous becomes "Cooking has been being done by them" in passive voice.
The simple present tense can't be used in the passive voice. Simple present is the base form of a verb without the use of auxiliary verbs. Passive voice is created with a form of be (an auxiliary verb) and a past participle. Note: the previous sentence is an example of passive voice in the present tense. Is created is the passive verb.
The Present Simple in the Passive Voice of the verb TO SET.
"You are told" is in the present tense. It is the present passive voice of the verb "to tell."
The present perfect tense of "sing" in passive voice is "has been sung."
"The speech is spoken by Obama" is in the present tense, but it's in the passive voice and a bit cumbersome. Passive voice is when the subject is placed in the object position (it receives the action of the verb instead of performing it). Passive voice isn't incorrect, but sometimes, active voice is better. "Obama speaks the speech" is active voice but still awkward. "Obama delivers a speech" is present tense. "Obama gives a speech" is present tense, as well.
The tense present imperative passive is a grammatical form that expresses a command or request in the passive voice in the present tense. It is used to instruct or advise someone to perform a specific action, with the subject of the sentence receiving the action rather than performing it.
To change interrogative present simple active voice sentences into passive voice, you typically move the object of the active sentence to the subject position in the passive sentence, and use a form of "be" along with the past participle of the verb. For example, change "Do you know the answer?" to "Is the answer known by you?"
To convert the present perfect continuous tense into passive voice, use "has been" or "have been" followed by the past participle of the main verb. For example, "They have been cooking" in present perfect continuous becomes "Cooking has been being done by them" in passive voice.
Subject Verb Object. No passive voice Present tense.
It is in present tense, however there might be a difference depending on what the entire verb string is. She is. -present tense She is supposed... -present tense, passive voice In the second example 'supposed' is the past participle of 'suppose'.
Past tense: voiced Present tense: voice Future tense: will voice
WAS KNOWN = Past Tense in the PAssive Voice