The phrase "the voice was like a thin ice breaking" suggests a sound that is fragile, tentative, and potentially alarming. It evokes an image of something that is on the verge of collapse, implying vulnerability or tension in the speaker's tone. This comparison may also indicate that the voice carries an underlying sense of danger or foreboding, much like the precariousness of walking on thin ice. Overall, it conveys a feeling of instability and apprehension.
No, "He is a boy" is not in passive voice. Passive voice involves rearranging the sentence to emphasize the receiver of the action rather than the doer, which would change the sentence to something like "The boy is being called."
I don't like your tone of voice.
it is in the active voice. <3 c: have fun with your english!
First, "stone like" should be hyphenated: "stone-like." The sentence as written is in active voice. If it were written in passive voice it would be: "Stone-like structures are built by corals."
Your voice will be all breaking up and it's like losing your voice. It will heal just a coupleof days,and ur voice will be back to normal.
Example sentence - Her voice sounded like a songbird when she sang the song.
No, it is the rising and falling of a voice while speaking.
He was from Belfast, Northern Ireland, and spoke with an Irish lilt in his voice.
The active voice sentence is: 1 The tornado warning at Scott AFB scared you. The passive equivalent is: 2 You were scared by the tornado warning at Scott AFB. Passive voice is often made by using "by" in the sentence, just like this sentence is passive.
Well, techinically no. But it could be, depending on how you use it in a sentence. Like, for example..."The president will voice out his opinion at his speech today at noon." So, the word voice could be a verb. :)
The sentence is written in the present perfect tense. It is active voice because Rocky (the subject) has done something. If you write "The picture was taken by Rocky" that would be passive voice.
I assume you are thinking of a sentence like "I massaged myself." with the reflexive pronoun "myself". In a sentence like this the subject and object are the same person, so by putting it into the passive, you make the object the subject. Except that the object is already the subject, so the passive form comes out "I was massaged by myself." It is almost the same. Same thing with third person reflexives. "She poisoned herself" is "She was poisoned by herself" in the passive.