Please be asked to go home.
You can't: there is no passive form of this verb--just as there is no passive form of the verb "to go". Why? Because in order to have a passive voice, the verb in question must be transitive: i.e., take an object. You can't should a thing, or go a thing. But you can, for instance, stroke a thing. So you can say that the thing is/was stroked--passive.
I shall go home He/she will go home You (singular) will go home We shall go home They will go home You (plural) will go home. In practice nowadays, the "shall" is rarely used, and "will" is used for all forms. When "shall" was in more common use, to say "I will..." was a more forceful expression.
School is gone to by me.
School is gone to by you.
You must be gone to hell.
An at home is a form of party where the host says they will be at home at certain hours, during which time guests can come and go as they please.
TO GO cannot be used in the Passive Voice. IF it could, it would be something like this: "He was gone there".
You can't: there is no passive form of this verb--just as there is no passive form of the verb "to go". Why? Because in order to have a passive voice, the verb in question must be transitive: i.e., take an object. You can't should a thing, or go a thing. But you can, for instance, stroke a thing. So you can say that the thing is/was stroked--passive.
Prisoners go on hunger strikes in order to get their demands (whateve they may be met). It is a form of passive aggressive behaviour
Passive because it doesn't tell us who lost the pencil. Jack had lost the pencil -- is an active sentence The pencil had been lost by Jack -- is a passive sentence. You don't have to have the agent (by Jack)
please i want to know when the form is out
Go to home
It is a type of passive diffusion, as the water travels along a concentration gradiant. As opposed to active transport, where the substances can pass against a concentration gradiant.
go on the website
Please go to this address: www.groups.google.com
You don't have to go home, but please vacate the premises now.
I shall go home He/she will go home You (singular) will go home We shall go home They will go home You (plural) will go home. In practice nowadays, the "shall" is rarely used, and "will" is used for all forms. When "shall" was in more common use, to say "I will..." was a more forceful expression.