The boy is running.
The past tense is voiced. The present tense is voice. The future tense is will voice.
"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.
"You are told" is in the present tense. It is the present passive voice of the verb "to tell."
The sentence is written in the present perfect tense. It is active voice because Rocky (the subject) has done something. If you write "The picture was taken by Rocky" that would be passive voice.
Be concise and clear. Use active voice and present tense. Include relevant keywords. Make it engaging and attention-grabbing.
The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on
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'.
No. The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on
This sentence is in passive voice. To change it to active voice, you could say "Five dollars were present."
No. Passive voice is almost always past tense, though it's possible to say, "The lamp is being broken" and "The lamp will be broken."
The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on So to change protect into the passive would be I protect (active)/ It is protected (passive)
Passive and active is not a tense, it is a voice. To make that sentence active, the doer of the action needs to be identified. Example: The repair man connected the battery to the mains.