Active and passive voices
Active and passive voices
Voice is a verb form that indicates if the sentence’s subject performs or
receives an action.
There are two types of voice—active voice and passive voice.
➲ If the sentence’s subject performs the action, the sentence is written in
the active voice. ‘‘The pilot landed the plane’’ is written in the active
voice since the subject (pilot) performed the action (landed the plane).
➲If the sentence’s subject receives the action, the sentence is written in the
passive voice. ‘‘The plane was landed by the pilot’’ is written in the
passive voice since the subject (plane) received the pilot’s action (landed
the plane).
Note: Good writers use the active voice whenever possible. However, if you
want to emphasize a specific point, you can use the passive voice. That is why
the sentence, ‘‘An exciting program was aired by our local television station,’’
is acceptable, even though it is written in the passive voice. The writer wants
to emphasize the program, not the television station.
the interjection
Active and passive voices
agreement between indefinite pronouns and their antecedents
agreement involving prepositional phrases
Commas Part Five
Commas Part Four
Commas Part One
Commas Part Three
Commas Part Two
complete and simple predicates
complete and simple subjects
complex sentences
compound complex sentences
compound prepositions and the preposition adverb question
compound subject and compound predicate
compound subjects
part two
compound subjects part one
Confusing usage words part eight
Confusing usage words part five
Confusing usage words part four
Confusing usage words part one
Confusing usage words part seven
Confusing usage words part six
Confusing usage words part three
Confusing usage words part three 2
Confusing usage words part two
First Capitalization List
indefinite pronouns
Indefinite pronouns and the possessive case
introducing clauses
introducing phrases
Irregular Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
irregular verbs part one
irregular verbs part two
Italics Hyphens
and Brackets
Misplaced and dangling modifiers
More Apostrophe Situations
More subject verb agreement situations
Parentheses Ellipsis Marks and Dashes
Periods Question Marks and Exclamation Marks
personal pronouns
pronouns and their antecedents
Quotation Marks
Part Three
Quotation Marks Part One
Quotation Marks Part Two
reflexive demonstrative and interrogative pronouns
Regular Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
regular verb tenses
Second Capitalization List
sentences fragments and run on sentences
singular and plural nouns and pronouns
Sound a like words Part Four
Sound a like words Part Three
Sound a like words Part Two
Sound alike words part one
subject and verb agreement
subject complements predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives
subject verb agreement situations
the adjective
the adjective clause
the adjective phrase
the adverb
the adverb clause
the adverb phrase
The Apostrophe
the appositive
The Colon
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the correlative conjunction
the direct object
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the indirect object
the infinitive and infinitive phrase
The nominative case
the noun
the noun adjective pronoun question
the noun clause
the object of the preposition
the participle and participial phrase
The possessive case
The possessive case 2
The possessive case and pronouns
the preposition
the prepositional phrase
the pronoun
The Semicolon
the subordinating conjunction
the verb
The verb be
the verb phrase
Transitive and intransitive verbs
types of nouns
types of sentences by purpose
Using Capital Letters
what good writers do
My Account / Test History
Science Facts
The English rhyme Ring-a-Ring-o'-Roses dates from the time of the bubonic plague.The ‘roses' refer to red spots that appeared before boils started, the ‘posies' to flowers people carried around to counteract the bad air that they thought caused plague, and the sneezing was an early symptom.
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