๐ฏExplanation for ESL Students (B2 Level)
๐The Passive Voice is used when we want to focus on the action or the receiver of the action, rather than on who or what is doing the action.
๐กIn passive sentences, the object becomes the subject, and the focus shifts from the doer to what was done.
๐งBasic Structure:
Subject + be (correct form) + past participle (verb3)
โญThe verb "be" changes according to the tense, but the past participle stays the same!
๐We use the passive voice when:
๐ฌAdding the Agent (by + doer):
If we want to mention WHO did the action, we add by + the agent at the end:
โ ๏ธBut remember: we only mention the agent when it's important or relevant!
๐The passive voice can be used in all tenses. The key is to change the form of "be" according to the tense, while keeping the past participle the same.
Tense | Active Voice | Passive Voice | Structure |
---|---|---|---|
Simple Present | They clean the room. | The room is cleaned. | am/is/are + past participle |
Simple Past | They cleaned the room. | The room was cleaned. | was/were + past participle |
Simple Future | They will clean the room. | The room will be cleaned. | will be + past participle |
Present Continuous | They are cleaning the room. | The room is being cleaned. | am/is/are being + past participle |
Past Continuous | They were cleaning the room. | The room was being cleaned. | was/were being + past participle |
Present Perfect | They have cleaned the room. | The room has been cleaned. | have/has been + past participle |
Past Perfect | They had cleaned the room. | The room had been cleaned. | had been + past participle |
Future Perfect | They will have cleaned the room. | The room will have been cleaned. | will have been + past participle |
โ ๏ธImportant Notes:
๐Structure: am/is/are + past participle
๐Structure: was/were + past participle
๐Structure: will be + past participle
๐Structure: am/is/are being + past participle
๐Structure: was/were being + past participle
๐Structure: have/has been + past participle
๐Structure: had been + past participle
๐ฏModal verbs like can, could, should, must, may, might, would can also be used in the passive voice!
Modal + be + past participle
Modal | Active Voice | Passive Voice |
---|---|---|
can | They can solve the problem. | The problem can be solved. |
could | They could see the mountains. | The mountains could be seen. |
should | You should finish the homework. | The homework should be finished. |
must | We must follow the rules. | The rules must be followed. |
may | They may cancel the meeting. | The meeting may be cancelled. |
might | They might discover a cure. | A cure might be discovered. |
would | He would do the work. | The work would be done. |
๐กMore Examples with Modals:
๐Perfect Modals in Passive:
For past modals (could have, should have, must have, etc.), we use:
Modal + have been + past participle
๐Move the auxiliary verb (be, have, will, modal) to the beginning:
๐ฌWh- Questions:
๐Add "not" after the auxiliary verb (be, have, will, modal):
๐กCommon Contractions:
โ ๏ธWatch out for these common errors:
โ๏ธUse ACTIVE voice when:
โ๏ธUse PASSIVE voice when:
๐Compare These Situations:
Some verbs can have two objects (a person and a thing). We can make TWO different passive sentences:
๐กCommon verbs: give, send, offer, show, teach, tell, ask, pay, lend
In informal English, we sometimes use get + past participle instead of be + past participle:
โ ๏ธThis is more informal and common in spoken English!
With verbs like say, believe, think, know, report, consider, we can use special passive structures:
๐ฏIf you speak Portuguese, here are the most common mistakes Brazilian students make with passive voice, and how to avoid them!
1๏ธโฃChallenge 1: Confusion with Word Order (Subject โ Object)
In Portuguese, passive sentences can keep similar word order or use "se" to indicate passivity (Vende-se casas = Houses for sale). In English, you must "flip" the object into the subject position.
2๏ธโฃChallenge 2: Omitting the Auxiliary "to be"
Portuguese sometimes expresses the passive without a clear auxiliary. Brazilians often forget be or confuse it with have.
3๏ธโฃChallenge 3: Problems with Verb Agreement (be + past participle)
Portuguese verbs don't require the same auxiliary + participle combination. Students mix tenses or forget the participle form.
4๏ธโฃChallenge 4: Choosing Between Active and Passive Voice
In Portuguese, the passive is less frequent in spoken language and more common in formal writing. Brazilians often overuse the active in English.
5๏ธโฃChallenge 5: Confusion with "by" Agent or Omission
In Portuguese, the agent (por alguรฉm) is often omitted. Brazilians either always include by (even when unnecessary) or omit it when needed.
6๏ธโฃChallenge 6: Using Passive with Intransitive Verbs
Portuguese sometimes allows "passive-like" structures with se. Brazilians mistakenly try to make intransitive verbs passive.
7๏ธโฃChallenge 7: Tense Confusion in Passive Forms
Combining be with the correct tense is tricky.
8๏ธโฃChallenge 8: Overuse of "Get" Passive
Portuguese doesn't have an equivalent to the English get passive (He got fired). Learners sometimes overgeneralize and use it in formal contexts where be is correct.
9๏ธโฃChallenge 9: Literal Translation from Portuguese
Portuguese passive with "se" often becomes a direct mistranslation.
๐Challenge 10: Difficulty in Switching Active โ Passive
When asked to transform sentences, many Brazilians struggle to maintain tense, agreement, and meaning.
๐ฏQuick Summary for Brazilian Students:
๐Remember: The passive voice is a powerful tool for shifting focus from the doer to the action or receiver. Use it wisely to make your English more sophisticated and appropriate for different contexts!