My mother's pet dog is loved by her.
Animals are loved by everybody.
Everyone loves his country .
That type of sentence is an interrogative sentence.
Oh, dude, the verb in that sentence is "loves." It's like the action word, you know, showing what Sam is all about, his love for basketball. So, yeah, "loves" is the verb there. Cool, right?
Everybody loves you!
Animals are loved by everybody.
Everyone loves his country .
My mother insisted on replacing that indecorous chair that my father loves so much.
I'll start with active voice because it's simpler. In an active sentence, the subject is doing the action. A straightforward example is the sentence "Steve loves Amy." Steve is the subject, and he is doing the action: he loves Amy, the object of the sentence. In passive voice, the target of the action gets promoted to the subject position. Instead of saying, "Steve loves Amy," I would say, "Amy is loved by Steve." The subject of the sentence becomes Amy, but she isn't doing anything. Rather, she is just the recipient of Steve's love. The focus of the sentence has changed from Steve to Amy. Also note the "is" you will see a lot of that in the passive. Overall the active voice is better to use in writing and speeches
yes its possible but usually a mother loves her daughter more
loves
The child loves more than the mother.
That type of sentence is an interrogative sentence.
No, he does not hate his mother, he loves his mom.
Oh, dude, the verb in that sentence is "loves." It's like the action word, you know, showing what Sam is all about, his love for basketball. So, yeah, "loves" is the verb there. Cool, right?
The subject of the sentence is the proper noun 'Isabel'.
Where can one hear Rev. C. L. Franklin's song " Your Mother Loves Her Children