you are forbidden to make a noise
A noise is not to be made.
A noise should not be made.
"to be called" is passive, but "what do you prefer" is active. To make "to be called" active, you could say "what do you prefer that others call you?" To make "what do you prefer" passive, you would say "what is preferred by you..."
You change passive voice to active voice by making the actor(s) the subject of the sentence, e.g., "the question was asked by the user" (passive) versus, "the user asked the question" (active).
Using passive voice can make your writing less engaging and clear to the reader. It can also obscure the action or the doer of the action in the sentence. Additionally, passive voice can result in wordy and awkward construction.
A noise is not to be made.
A noise should not be made.
the more you make noise the more you lose your voice
"to be called" is passive, but "what do you prefer" is active. To make "to be called" active, you could say "what do you prefer that others call you?" To make "what do you prefer" passive, you would say "what is preferred by you..."
You change passive voice to active voice by making the actor(s) the subject of the sentence, e.g., "the question was asked by the user" (passive) versus, "the user asked the question" (active).
To write in passive voice, you put the actor (subject) second. Active - Sammy made tea. Passive - The tea was made by Sammy. Passive voice often has the word by before the actor. Note: Instead of I made tea, you would need to write, "The tea was made by me." About how to make tea, think about the precise steps to make tea. Put these in chronological order. Write about each step, but in passive voice.
Active voice is when the subject of a sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject receives the action. Active voice is usually more direct and engaging, while passive voice can make writing sound more formal or distant.
Passive voice is when the subject has the action done to them. Hold on... that doesn't make too much sense. Here's an example. Passive voice: "The car is being cleaned by the volunteers." Active voice: "The volunteers clean the car." Passive voice is when the subject receives the action. Active voice is the subject doing the action.
Depending with the subject, passive voice makes army writing clear and direct communication.
Using passive voice can make your writing less engaging and clear to the reader. It can also obscure the action or the doer of the action in the sentence. Additionally, passive voice can result in wordy and awkward construction.
This sentence can't be written in passive voice. If the verb in the sentence does not have an object, you can't make the sentence passive. A passive voice sentence using some of the words would be, "The garden is going to be cleaned by the gardener." The active voice form would be, "The gardener is going to clean the garden." In this sentence, the subject is "gardener" and the object is 'garden."
the more you make NOISE the faster you lose your VOICE