Please provide the sentence so I can determine if the verb is active or passive.
The verb "given" in the sentence "Were you given a second helping" is in the passive voice.
To change an active sentence to passive, identify the object in the active sentence and make it the subject in the passive sentence. Move the subject of the active sentence to the phrase with "by" and change the verb to its past participle form. To change a passive sentence to active, identify the subject in the passive sentence and make it the subject in the active sentence. Use an appropriate active verb to describe the subject's action and add the original object of the passive sentence as the direct object in the active sentence.
To change a sentence from active to passive voice, move the object of the active sentence to the subject position in the passive sentence and add a form of the verb "to be" along with the past participle of the main verb. For example, "I ate the cake" in active voice becomes "The cake was eaten by me" in passive voice.
Active voice is when the subject of a sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject receives the action. In active voice, the sentence is structured subject-verb-object, whereas in passive voice, the sentence is structured object-verb-subject. Active voice is more direct and concise, while passive voice can be used to focus on the receiver of the action or when the doer is unknown or less important.
To change an active voice sentence to passive voice, move the object of the active sentence to the beginning of the passive sentence and include the appropriate form of the verb "to be" plus the past participle of the main verb to create the passive construction. For example, "The company launched a new product" in active voice becomes "A new product was launched by the company" in passive voice.
The verb "given" in the sentence "Were you given a second helping" is in the passive voice.
To change an active sentence to passive, identify the object in the active sentence and make it the subject in the passive sentence. Move the subject of the active sentence to the phrase with "by" and change the verb to its past participle form. To change a passive sentence to active, identify the subject in the passive sentence and make it the subject in the active sentence. Use an appropriate active verb to describe the subject's action and add the original object of the passive sentence as the direct object in the active sentence.
Jumped can be either active or passive depending on the context: Active: John jumped out of the window. Passive: John was jumped by a mugger. In the first sentence John is the one doing the jumping, so the verb is active. In the second sentence, John is acted on by the mugger, so the verb is passive.
Active voice is when the subject of a sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject receives the action. In active voice, the sentence is structured subject-verb-object, whereas in passive voice, the sentence is structured object-verb-subject. Active voice is more direct and concise, while passive voice can be used to focus on the receiver of the action or when the doer is unknown or less important.
a verb that causes the subject to perform the action.
In the active-voice sentence "I should kill you," the receiver follows the verb. In the passive-voice sentence "You should be killed," the receiver precedes the verb. The difference between active and passive voice is merely the presence of the actor. In passive voice, the actor disappears.
This is not an active sentence so it cannot be changed to a passive sentence. Active sentences have a subject and a verb. eg The dog chased the cat. As a passive sentence -- The cat was chased.
It is active. Hunter chased. If the sentence went like this: The lion was chased by the hunter, then it would be passive.
"a tap on a pole" is not a complete sentence. It does not contain a verb (a key component in active and passive voice), so it is neither active nor passive.
This is a passive sentence. Passive sentences have a verb phrase -be + past participleThe verb phrase for this sentence is were converted
This is an active sentence.To find out if this is active or passive find the verb. The verb in this sentence is 'lost'.The verbs in passive sentences have this form - be verb + past participle.So a single verb - lost - is not a passive verb phrase.Another way you can tell if a sentence is passive or active, is ask yourself who or what did the action of the verb? Who lost jobs? The answer is skilled and unskilled labourers. The phrase skilled and unskilled labourers comes before the verb so it is in the subject position - subject + verb. This will tell you this is an active sentence.In a passive sentence the subject is not given. Or if it is given it is called the agent and is put at the end of the sentence using - by + noun (phrase).This is a passive sentence:In the depression jobs were lost.Or if you want to say who lost the jobs:In the depression jobs were lost by skilled and unskilled workers.
This is a passive sentence. The actors are after the preposition "by" and the verb is "BE + Participle". The active version is: Ghosts haunt the old castle.