The present perfect of pray is have prayed / has prayed.
The present perfect passive voice of the infinitive "to pray" is "to have been prayed". For example, "The prayers have been said by the congregation."
"Pray" is the present tense. "Prayed" is the past tense as well as the past participle. "Praying" is the present participle.
That would be "has been prayed." An unusual usage, so to speak, since "pray" is most often intransitive in modern speech.
1. in the Passive Voice 2. to form the Present Perfect 3. to form the Past Perfect 4. to form the Past Infinitive 5. .... the the Past Conditional 6. .... the Past Subjunctive.
present perfect passive can occur but it is rare.They have been building the library for ages.The library has been being built for ages.
Passive voice must be present with a be form (being/been/am/is/was/are/were etc). Perfect continuous already has a be form 'been' and hence cannot be converted to passive form
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.
The sentence This may have been romanticized. is a passive voice sentence in the present perfect tense.
The simple present tense can't be used in the passive voice. Simple present is the base form of a verb without the use of auxiliary verbs. Passive voice is created with a form of be (an auxiliary verb) and a past participle. Note: the previous sentence is an example of passive voice in the present tense. Is created is the passive verb.
1. to go = the First Form = the Infinitive Mood. It helps us form: the Present Simple, the Future Simple, the Future-in-the Past, the Present Conditional, the Present Synthetic Subjunctive, the Gerund Mood. 2. went = the Simple Past Tense 3. gone = the Past Participle, used to form: the Present Perfect, the Past Perfect, the Future Perfect, the Past Conditional, the Past Synthetic Subjunctive, the Passive Voice.
In active voice, the subject of the sentence performs the action. For example, "I have finished my homework." In passive voice, the subject receives the action. For example, "My homework has been finished by me." The main difference is that active voice focuses on the subject performing the action, while passive voice focuses on the object receiving the action.
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An example of the interrogative present simple active voice would be, Do you like me? The passive equivalent is, am I liked?
It's when the past participle is expressed in the passive voice.
== == "English grammer active and passive voice change from active to passive .