Yes, Hindi language does have a passive voice form. Passive voice in Hindi is formed by conjugating the verb to agree with the subject, followed by the past participle of the main verb and the appropriate postposition based on the tense.
Yes, Dev Patel can speak Hindi. He is of Indian descent and has demonstrated his ability to speak Hindi in various interviews and films.
In Hindi, you can say "मुझे हिंदी नहीं आती है" (pronounced as "Mujhe Hindi nahi aati hai"), which means "I don't speak Hindi."
You would say "Je parle hindi" in French to mean "I speak Hindi."
The passive form of produce is "produced."
The passive form of "destroy" is "be destroyed."
Yes, Dev Patel can speak Hindi. He is of Indian descent and has demonstrated his ability to speak Hindi in various interviews and films.
In Hindi, you can say "मुझे हिंदी नहीं आती है" (pronounced as "Mujhe Hindi nahi aati hai"), which means "I don't speak Hindi."
You would say "Je parle hindi" in French to mean "I speak Hindi."
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They speak Hindi.
They speak Hindi.
The passive form of "Do it." is "Let it be done (by you)."
"Your name is not known by me." is passive voice.
India
srain phool. Source: I speak Hindi and am from India
The passive is only possible within a limited number of tense forms and situations. i.e. Some tenses do not have passive forms.And some verbs that have passive forms may not always be used in the 'passive' way. There are no grammar rules about which verbs can and cannot be used in the passive. This knowledge comes with increased familiarity with the English language.RULE for the passive of present simple verbs: am/are/is + past participle.Applying this rule to the verb in the target sentence, 'I want' becomes 'is wanted by me.''to speak English' must also be changed from being the object of the sentence to being the subject of the sentence, and the complete sentence therefore changes from "I want to speak English" to "To speak English is wanted by me."However! This structure sounds very strange to native English speakers! In this situation it is much more usual to use, NOT in the passive form, but the active form, as given in the question: i.e. "I want to speak English."-----------------MORE INFORMATION about passives:Sentences with infinitives (or clauses) as their objects cannot normally change those objects into subjects of passive sentences. e.g. Mary likes to listen to music. (NOT To listen to music is liked by Mary.)Verbs expressing ideas such as hoping, liking, wanting, etc. and which are followed by infinitives, cannot usually be used in the passive form. e.g. I like my friends to say what they think. (NOT My friends are liked to say what they think.)
Zayn speaks English as he was born and raised in Bradford although he can speak Hindi too (Indian) even though he is Pakistani!