No. Recall is a present tense verb.
Passive tense has this form - be + past participle.
Recall is a regular verb so the past participle is recalled.
Several models of car were recalled last month. - were recalled is the passive verb phrase.
The ambassador was recalled to his country.
No, recall is not in the passive voice. It is an active verb that means to remember or bring back to mind. It indicates the action of retrieving information from memory.
No. Happened is a past tense verb. It is the past tense of happen.A passive verb phrase has this form -- be + past participle.eg The butter is kept in the cupboard.I think you cannot use happen in a passive sentence.
"You are told" is in the present tense. It is the present passive voice of the verb "to tell."
The italicized verb "examined" is in future perfect passive tense.
The passive voice is created with a form of be and a past participle. The past tense forms of be are wasand were; the past participle of forget is forgotten.Was/were forgotten
The general present tense is "Recall". Simple present is "Recalls". Present continuous tense is "Am/is/are recalling". Present perfect tense is "has/have recalled" and present perfect continuous tense is "Has/have been recalling". The general past tense is "recalled". Simple past - "Recalled". Past continuous- "Was recalling/ were recalling". Past perfect - "Had recalled". Past perfect continuous- "Had been recalling".
Were awarded is past tense in the passive voice.
tense
WAS KNOWN = Past Tense in the PAssive Voice
No it doesn't have to be past tense.
tense
passive past tense
The verb "clamaverunt" is in the perfect tense in Latin, indicating that the action is completed in the past.
It derives.
passive imagination
No. Happened is a past tense verb. It is the past tense of happen.A passive verb phrase has this form -- be + past participle.eg The butter is kept in the cupboard.I think you cannot use happen in a passive sentence.
The passive voice is created with a form of be and a past participle. The past tense forms of be are wasand were; the past participle of forget is forgotten.Was/were forgotten
answer Surely this is the same as saying "she is red" and so is in the present tense. Answer: This is a passive construction in the present simple tense.