Has your homework been finished by you?
To change a question into passive voice, you typically reverse the order of the subject and the verb, and add a form of "be" before the main verb. For example, the active question "Did you finish your homework?" can become the passive "Was your homework finished by you?"
You can't: there is no passive form of this verb--just as there is no passive form of the verb "to go". Why? Because in order to have a passive voice, the verb in question must be transitive: i.e., take an object. You can't should a thing, or go a thing. But you can, for instance, stroke a thing. So you can say that the thing is/was stroked--passive.
"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.
present perfect active:The students have invited us to the dance.present perfect passive:We have been invited to the dance.The active sentence tells us who the subject (doer/actor of the verb) is. The passive sentence does not tell who the actor is. This places emphasis on the action not the actor.
Please do your homework regularly is an imperative sentence and has no subject but the subject (you) is implied. So to make a passive sentence from an imperative sentence you can use the subject - you. You have been told to do your homework regularly. or you could say: Let your homework be done regularly.
To change a question into passive voice, you typically reverse the order of the subject and the verb, and add a form of "be" before the main verb. For example, the active question "Did you finish your homework?" can become the passive "Was your homework finished by you?"
You can't: there is no passive form of this verb--just as there is no passive form of the verb "to go". Why? Because in order to have a passive voice, the verb in question must be transitive: i.e., take an object. You can't should a thing, or go a thing. But you can, for instance, stroke a thing. So you can say that the thing is/was stroked--passive.
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 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.
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, "is addressed" is in the passive voice.
Can it be changed into passive voice?
present perfect active:The students have invited us to the dance.present perfect passive:We have been invited to the dance.The active sentence tells us who the subject (doer/actor of the verb) is. The passive sentence does not tell who the actor is. This places emphasis on the action not the actor.
Please do your homework regularly is an imperative sentence and has no subject but the subject (you) is implied. So to make a passive sentence from an imperative sentence you can use the subject - you. You have been told to do your homework regularly. or you could say: Let your homework be done regularly.
passive active A+