By using active voice.
Active sentences tell who does the action of the verb at the beginning of the sentence:
The cat chased the mouse. ( the cat does the action - chase)
Passive sentence don't have to say who does the action:
The mouse was chased.
If you want to say who does the action you can add by the cat at the end of the sentence:
The mouse was chased by the cat.
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.
"Will you marry me" can be changed to passive voice as "Will I be married by you." In the passive voice sentence, the subject of the active voice becomes the object of the passive voice, and the object of the active voice becomes the subject of the passive voice.
Yes, passive voice often hides the doer of the action, as the focus is on the recipient of the action rather than the one performing it. This can be intentional to shift focus or avoid responsibility.
Active voice: "John attended school." Passive voice: "The school was attended by John." Passive voice: "Jane was helped by John." Active voice: "John helped Jane." In active voice, the subject of the sentence usually comes first and is doing the action to something else. In passive voice, the predicate is being acted upon by the subject. Passive voice tends to be harder to read , and it tends to use more words. So for the most part, you should avoid using passive voice.
Yes, "is addressed" is in the passive voice.
In academic writing you want to avoid using a personal voice, such as I and me, as much as you can. You also want to avoid using a passive voice. Examples of this are: has been, have been, is ---ing, should.
Avoid passive voice.
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.
The passive voice of ''what do you do'' is "what is done by you?"
"Your name is not known by me." is passive voice.
Passive voice
"Will you marry me" can be changed to passive voice as "Will I be married by you." In the passive voice sentence, the subject of the active voice becomes the object of the passive voice, and the object of the active voice becomes the subject of the passive voice.
Yes, passive voice often hides the doer of the action, as the focus is on the recipient of the action rather than the one performing it. This can be intentional to shift focus or avoid responsibility.
Active voice: "John attended school." Passive voice: "The school was attended by John." Passive voice: "Jane was helped by John." Active voice: "John helped Jane." In active voice, the subject of the sentence usually comes first and is doing the action to something else. In passive voice, the predicate is being acted upon by the subject. Passive voice tends to be harder to read , and it tends to use more words. So for the most part, you should avoid using passive voice.
Yes, "is addressed" is in the passive voice.
Can it be changed into passive voice?
passive active A+