Change of Voice

by | Mar 23, 2025 | Notes

1. Introduction to Voice

  • Voice in grammar refers to the form of a verb that indicates whether the subject of the sentence performs or receives the action.
  • Active Voice: The subject performs the action.
  • Passive Voice: The subject receives the action.

2. Active Voice

  • Definition: In active voice, the subject of the sentence does or acts upon the verb.
  • Structure:
    • Subject + Verb + Object
  • Example:
    • Active: “She (subject) writes (verb) a letter (object).”
    • Explanation: The subject “she” is performing the action “writes.”

3. Passive Voice

  • Definition: In passive voice, the subject of the sentence is acted upon by the verb.
  • Structure:
    • Subject + form of ‘be’ + Past Participle (V3) + (by + agent)
  • Example:
    • Passive: “A letter (subject) is written (passive verb) by her (agent).”
    • Explanation: The subject “a letter” is receiving the action “is written.”

4. General Rules for Converting from Active to Passive

  1. Identify Object
    • In passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence.
    • Only transitive verbs (verbs that take an object) can be converted to passive.
  2. Change the Verb Form
    • Use the appropriate form of ‘be’ (am/is/are/was/were/be/been/being) + past participle (V3) of the main verb.
    • The form of “be” depends on the tense of the original sentence.
  3. Subject becomes Agent (introduced by “by”)
    • The subject of the active sentence becomes the object of the preposition ‘by’ in the passive sentence.
    • If the agent (original subject) is unknown or irrelevant, it can be omitted.
  4. Adjust Pronouns & Verb Tense
    • Pronoun changes: I → me, we → us, he → him, she → her, they → them, etc.
    • Tense changes involve using the correct “be” + V3 structure.
  5. Retain the Original Meaning
    • The action remains the same; only the focus shifts from doer to receiver.

5. Tense-wise Transformations (Active → Passive)

Below are common tense transformations. Note how the form of “be” changes according to the tense:

  1. Simple Present
    • Active: “He writes a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter is written by him.”
  2. Present Continuous
    • Active: “He is writing a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter is being written by him.”
  3. Present Perfect
    • Active: “He has written a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter has been written by him.”
  4. Simple Past
    • Active: “He wrote a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter was written by him.”
  5. Past Continuous
    • Active: “He was writing a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter was being written by him.”
  6. Past Perfect
    • Active: “He had written a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter had been written by him.”
  7. Simple Future
    • Active: “He will write a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter will be written by him.”
  8. Future Perfect
    • Active: “He will have written a letter.”
    • Passive: “A letter will have been written by him.”

6. Other Common Transformations

  1. Modals (can, could, may, might, must, should, etc.)
    • Active: “She can solve the puzzle.”
    • Passive: “The puzzle can be solved by her.”
    • Structure: Modal + be + V3.
  2. Imperative Sentences (commands, requests)
    Active: “Open the door.”
    • Passive: “Let the door be opened.” (formal) / “You are requested to open the door.” (request)
    • Common structure: “Let + object + be + V3” or use appropriate polite form.
  3. Interrogative Sentences (questions)
    • Active: “Did he write a letter?”
    • Passive: “Was a letter written by him?”
    • Active: “Who wrote this letter?” (subject question)
    • Passive: “By whom was this letter written?”
  4. Omission of Agent
    • If the subject (doer) is unknown or unimportant, the “by + agent” phrase can be omitted.
    • Example: “The window was broken.” (We don’t need to say “by someone.”)

7. Example Sentences (Active → Passive)

  1. Simple Present
    • Active: “They clean the house every day.”
    • Passive: “The house is cleaned every day (by them).”
  2. Present Continuous
    • Active: “The chef is preparing dinner.”
    • Passive: “Dinner is being prepared by the chef.”
  3. Past Perfect
    • Active: “She had completed the project before the deadline.”
    • Passive: “The project had been completed by her before the deadline.”
  4. Simple Future
    • Active: “He will deliver the package tomorrow.”
    • Passive: “The package will be delivered by him tomorrow.”
  5. Modal
    • Active: “You must follow these instructions.”
    • Passive: “These instructions must be followed (by you).”

8. Key Points for Quick Revision

  1. Identify the Object: Only transitive verbs (those with objects) can be made passive.
  2. Use Correct ‘Be’ Form: Matches the tense of the original active sentence.
  3. Past Participle (V3): Always use V3 for the main verb in passive.
  4. Subject → Agent: Moved to “by + agent” (optional if the doer is irrelevant).
  5. Agent Omission: Common if the doer is unknown, obvious, or unimportant.
  6. Don’t Change Basic Meaning: Focus remains on the same action, just flips the emphasis.

Change of Voice MCQ Question and Answers

After reviewing the concepts of Tenses, check your knowledge with these practice questions