No. One correct passive voice form would be "The inventor was awarded a prize."
Were awarded is past tense in the passive voice.
"The inventor was given an award" - however, active voice is almost always clearer.
The correct voice to use when writing an abstract is typically the third person, passive voice.
Yes, it is.
Yes, that example sentence is correctly written in passive voice. The actor has not been identified. "Ten thousand dollars was found on a bus by a passenger" is another way to write that sentence in passive voice and to identify the actor."A passenger found ten thousand dollars on a bus" is active voice.
No, it's active. The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb.
The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on
The passive voice of ''what do you do'' is "what is done by you?"
"Your name is not known by me." is passive voice.
"Will be sent" is correct. It follows the correct passive voice construction with the past participle "sent" after the auxiliary verb "will be".
No. The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on
Passive voice