In passive voice, the sentence "The hammer might have struck him" is transformed by making the object of the active sentence (him) the subject of the passive sentence, using the appropriate form of the verb "to be" (in this case, "been") and the past participle of the main verb (struck). The modified sentence in passive voice is:
"He might have been struck by the hammer."
In this passive construction, the emphasis is on the receiver of the action (him), rather than the doer of the action (the hammer). The subject of the passive sentence (him) is now affected by the action of being struck by the hammer.
The hammer might have hit him to change into his passive voice.
No. A Passive Input or you might know it as, a Passive Transport does that.
"The police arrested me for loitering," is in the active voice. A passive version of this might be, "I was arrested by the police for loitering."
There is no such thing as a Jewish hammer, however, you might be thinking of the Hebrew word "Maccabee", which means hammer in Hebrew, and is the name of the principle family in the story of Hanukkah.
They would use a rock hammer.
You can write "might have" in a contraction form with an apostrophe as "might've."
The passive of went might be were taken or sent or conveyed or delivered or mailed or any such construction using the auxiliary were and a past participle.
I suppose so. If you can say Most of the students flunked this test, then you might say This test was flunked by most of the students.
The lock on a muzzle loader consisted of sear, hammer and hammer spring. With some modern guns (a Winchester 94) the hammer/ hammer spring would be a close match. For a striker fired weapon (no outside hammer) it might be the firing pin and spring.
How about, Who was this done by? or you might have to use "Whom". Can't remember which one.
A writer might choose to use the passive voice to shift the focus onto the receiver of the action rather than the doer, to create a sense of formality or objectivity, or to emphasize the action rather than the one performing it.
yes but you might damae the car