An example of the interrogative present simple active voice would be, Do you like me? The passive equivalent is, am I liked?
== == "English grammer active and passive voice change from active to passive .
Active sentences are subject + verb + object. The show the doer (subject ) of the verb.eg The dog chased the cat.Passive sentences are not s + v+ o.eg The cat was chased. (past simple passive)Passive sentences have the verb form - be+past participle eg was chasedAnother example The cake has been eaten. (present perfect passive).If you want to show who did the action in a passive sentence then add - by+noun or noun phrase.eg The cat was chased by the dog.
To change a future interrogative sentence into a passive voice sentence, you would generally rearrange the sentence structure so that the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence. For example, "Will they finish the project?" could be changed to "Will the project be finished by them?"
Active: She hits the table. 'She' is the subject and is doing the action. Passive: The table is hit by her. 'She' (or 'her' in this case) is doing the action but is not the subject.
Mike was walking to the store. - This is an active past continuous sentence.Mike walked to the store. - This is an active past simple sentenceMike walks to the store. - This is an active present simple sentence,See how the passive becomes the active, and the sentence is set in the present tense and thus more "assertive" or "active" if you will.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 sentences 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.You can avoid writing in passive voice if you use activesentences
== == "English grammer active and passive voice change from active to passive .
No. Quite the opposite. Try to write your sentences in the active voice unless you have to use the passive.
The sentence "Sentences can be written in active and passive voices" is a declarative sentence written in passive voice.
yes
Active sentences are subject + verb + object. The show the doer (subject ) of the verb.eg The dog chased the cat.Passive sentences are not s + v+ o.eg The cat was chased. (past simple passive)Passive sentences have the verb form - be+past participle eg was chasedAnother example The cake has been eaten. (present perfect passive).If you want to show who did the action in a passive sentence then add - by+noun or noun phrase.eg The cat was chased by the dog.
To change a future interrogative sentence into a passive voice sentence, you would generally rearrange the sentence structure so that the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence. For example, "Will they finish the project?" could be changed to "Will the project be finished by them?"
This is not an active sentence so it cannot be changed to a passive sentence. Active sentences have a subject and a verb. eg The dog chased the cat. As a passive sentence -- The cat was chased.
Active: She hits the table. 'She' is the subject and is doing the action. Passive: The table is hit by her. 'She' (or 'her' in this case) is doing the action but is not the subject.
have/has flown This above is present perfect active not passive. Passive is be verb + past participle He has been flown to hospital.
This is a passive sentence. Passive sentences have a verb phrase -be + past participleThe verb phrase for this sentence is were converted
Mike was walking to the store. - This is an active past continuous sentence.Mike walked to the store. - This is an active past simple sentenceMike walks to the store. - This is an active present simple sentence,See how the passive becomes the active, and the sentence is set in the present tense and thus more "assertive" or "active" if you will.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 sentences 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.You can avoid writing in passive voice if you use activesentences
To transition from using passive voice to active voice in writing, focus on making the subject of the sentence the doer of the action. Use active verbs and rephrase sentences to clearly show who is performing the action. Practice by rewriting passive sentences in a more direct and engaging way.