The passive voice for noise as a verb would include forms like "is noised", "are noised", "was noised", and "were noised".
Example: Rumors of the merger were noised about for months.
Yes, "is" is a form of the verb "to be," which can be used in passive constructions.
The passive version is, noise has been made.
"We were trapped" is a past tense passive verb phrase, where "were" functions as the auxiliary verb for "trapped", which is the main verb in passive voice.
A noise is not to be made.
No. Happened is a past tense verb. It is the past tense of happen.A passive verb phrase has this form -- be + past participle.eg The butter is kept in the cupboard.I think you cannot use happen in a passive sentence.
The passive voice for noise as a verb would include forms like "is noised", "are noised", "was noised", and "were noised".Example: Rumors of the merger were noised about for months.
Yes, "is" is a form of the verb "to be," which can be used in passive constructions.
Is is a present tense singular be verb.A verb by itself cannot be passive. The passive is formed this way:be verb + past participle.Is can be used to make a passive verb phrase.A sample is taken every hour. - is taken = be verb + past participle
No.A passive verb phrase consists of - be verb + past participle.Overworked is the past participle of overwork but it must have a be verb with it to be a passive verb phrase. egThe staff are overworked by the bosses.
future passive
The passive version is, noise has been made.
"We were trapped" is a past tense passive verb phrase, where "were" functions as the auxiliary verb for "trapped", which is the main verb in passive voice.
A noise is not to be made.
No. Happened is a past tense verb. It is the past tense of happen.A passive verb phrase has this form -- be + past participle.eg The butter is kept in the cupboard.I think you cannot use happen in a passive sentence.
Its passive because the verb "KISSED" is in past form of verb.
Please provide the sentence so I can determine if the verb is active or passive.
The two voices of a verb are active voice and passive voice. In active voice, the subject performs the action of the verb, while in passive voice, the subject receives the action of the verb.