THE
PASSIVE VOICE
PASSIVE, FORM
The passive voice
in English is composed of two elements : the appropriate form of the
verb 'to be' + the past participle of the verb in question:
Subject
|
verb
'to be'
|
past
participle
|
The house
|
was
|
built ...
|
Example: to clean
Subject
|
verb
'to be'
|
past participle
|
Simple present:
|
The house
|
is
|
cleaned every
day.
|
|
|
|
Present continuous:
|
The house
|
is
being
|
cleaned at
the moment.
|
|
|
|
Simple past:
|
The house
|
was
|
cleaned yesterday.
|
|
|
|
Past continuous:
|
The house
|
was
being
|
cleaned last
week.
|
|
|
|
Present perfect:
|
The house
|
has
been
|
cleaned since
you left.
|
|
|
|
Past perfect:
|
The house
|
had
been
|
cleaned before
their arrival.
|
|
|
|
Future:
|
The house
|
will
be
|
cleaned next
week.
|
|
|
|
Future continuous:
|
The house
|
will
be being
|
cleaned tomorrow.
|
|
|
|
Present conditional:
|
The house
|
would
be
|
cleaned if
they had visitors.
|
|
|
|
Past conditional:
|
The house
|
would
have been
|
cleaned if
it had been dirty.
|
NOTE: 'to
be born' is a passive form and is most commonly used in the past
tense:
I was
born in 1976. When were
you born?
BUT: Around 100 babies are born
in this hospital every week.
Infinitive
form: infinitive of 'to be'
+ past participle: (to) be cleaned
This form is used
after modal verbs and other verbs normally followed by an infinitive,
e.g.
You have to
be tested on your English grammar
John might be promoted
next year.
She wants to be
invited to the party.
Gerund
or -ing form: being + past participle: being cleaned
This form is used
after prepositions and verbs normally followed by a gerund
Examples:
a. Most film stars
hate being interviewed.
b. I remember being taught
to drive.
c. The children are excited about being taken
to the zoo.
NOTE: Sometimes
the passive is formed using the verb to get instead of the verb
to be:
a. He got
arrested for dangerous driving.
b. They're
getting married later this year.
c. I'm not sure how the window got
broken.