You must be gone to hell.
"To hell be gone."
School is gone to by me.
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.
School is gone to by you.
Active.'I' is the subject of the sentence. Passive sentences don't have subjects. egactive - The cat chased the mouse. subject = catpassive - The mouse was chased.Passive verb phrases are - be + past participle- there is no be verb in your sentence.
In French, "go to hell" is pronounced as "va en enfer" (vah ahn ahn-fehr).
School is gone to by me.
It is written in the passive voice
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)
you are proposed to go
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.
TO GO cannot be used in the Passive Voice. IF it could, it would be something like this: "He was gone there".
School is gone to by you.
It is written in the passive voice.
Not possible as the verb 'to go' is intransitive.
I belive the word carajo originated in Spain and means "infierno" or hell. So "vete pal carajo", depending on the tone of the voice, could mean get out of hera fast or go to hell.
Nobody can answer this question with certainty.
Active.'I' is the subject of the sentence. Passive sentences don't have subjects. egactive - The cat chased the mouse. subject = catpassive - The mouse was chased.Passive verb phrases are - be + past participle- there is no be verb in your sentence.