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There are two types of passive
 voice sentences:
1.- Passive voice with agent.
2.- Passive voice without agent.
1. Passive voice with agent:
 These sentences are the transformation
 of active sentences like this one:
  “Leonardo Da Vinci painted the Mona
                    Lisa”
                  where
         “Leonardo” is the subject.
       “painted” is the verb phrase.
 And “the Mona Lisa” is the direct object.
The passive voice is a change in
    the focus of the information
In active voice we give more importance to the subject. In
           our sentence, Da Vinci gets the focus.



                       painted
However, with the passive voice we intend
the opposite effect. We focus on the object.




                   was painted
How do we transform an active
   sentence into a passive
         sentence?

   We must follow
      three steps…
Step 1
 The direct object of the active sentence
 becomes the subject (patient subject) of
 the passive sentence:
                 Active
   “Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa”
                 Passive
 “The Mona Lisa…” is the patient subject.
Step 2
      The verb changes like this:
We put the verb “to be” in the tense of
 the active voice sentence, followed by
 the original verb in the past participle
                  form.
  “Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa”
The verb is “paint” in past simple, so in
     the passive voice we will have:
   “The Mona Lisa was painted …”
Step 3
 The active subject (Leonardo), becomes the
 Agent, always introduced by the preposition
 “by”. This way:
     “Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa”
                  becomes
  “The Mona Lisa was painted by Leonardo”
2. Passive voice without agent.
 The transformations are the same, but the
 agent does not appear in the passive voice
sentence, because it is not important or it is
         not known. For example:
 In El Prado Museum a worker has
 found another version of the Mona
  Lisa. That worker is an anonymous
              person, so.
We use a passive without agent.



                     has been found



“A different version of the Mona Lisa has
    been found in El Prado Museum.”
Passive voice sentences without
   agent usually come from active
    sentences with subjects like:
Somebody, someone, they, people, e
                 tc…
   Subjects that do not give much
      important information.
Examples of passive voice
     without agent are:
     1.- People admire good singers.
  Passive: “Good singers are admired.”
 2.- Somebody has broken the window.
Passive: “The window has been broken.”
 3.- They are building a new town hall.
Passive: “A new town hall is being built.”
4.- Nobody has photographed the
               baby.
 Passive: “The baby hasn’t been
          photographed .”
  5.- Someone stole the new car
             yesterday.
 Passive voice: “The new car was
         stolen yesterday.”
Other examples of passive with agent:
 1.-“The policemen caught the thief.”
 Passive: “The thief was caught by the
               policemen.”
  2.- “The lions were eating a zebra.”
  Passive: “A zebra was being eaten by the
                     lions.”
   3.-”The Japanese have invented a new
                  computer.”
Passive: “A new computer has been invented
               by the Japanese.”
4.- “Spain won the World Cup in
               2010.”
Passive: “The World Cup was won
         by Spain in 2010.”
 5.- “Mary is making the coffee.”
Passive: “The coffee is being made
             by Mary.”
TENSE                 FORM
Present Simple        Am, is, are
Present continuous    Am / is / are being
Past Simple           Was, were
Past Continuous       Was being, were being
Present Perfect       Has been, have been
Future (will)         Will be
Conditional (would)   Would be
Goint to              Am/ are / is going to be
Modals                Can be, must be, etc…
Negative and Questions
  The first element in the verb phrase is
     called the operator. For example:
    “The car was being stolen.”

       This is the operator
The operator is in charge of questions and
                  answers.
“People spend a lot of money on stupid
                  things.”
               AFFIRMATIVE
“A lot of money is spent on stupid things”
              INTERROGATIVE
“Is a lot of money spent on stupid things?
                 NEGATIVE
   “A lot of money isn’t spent on stupid
                  things.”
THE END

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The pasive voice (mona lisa)

  • 1.
  • 2. There are two types of passive voice sentences: 1.- Passive voice with agent. 2.- Passive voice without agent.
  • 3. 1. Passive voice with agent:  These sentences are the transformation of active sentences like this one: “Leonardo Da Vinci painted the Mona Lisa” where “Leonardo” is the subject. “painted” is the verb phrase. And “the Mona Lisa” is the direct object.
  • 4. The passive voice is a change in the focus of the information In active voice we give more importance to the subject. In our sentence, Da Vinci gets the focus. painted
  • 5. However, with the passive voice we intend the opposite effect. We focus on the object. was painted
  • 6. How do we transform an active sentence into a passive sentence?  We must follow three steps…
  • 7. Step 1  The direct object of the active sentence becomes the subject (patient subject) of the passive sentence: Active “Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa” Passive “The Mona Lisa…” is the patient subject.
  • 8. Step 2  The verb changes like this: We put the verb “to be” in the tense of the active voice sentence, followed by the original verb in the past participle form. “Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa” The verb is “paint” in past simple, so in the passive voice we will have: “The Mona Lisa was painted …”
  • 9. Step 3  The active subject (Leonardo), becomes the Agent, always introduced by the preposition “by”. This way: “Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa” becomes “The Mona Lisa was painted by Leonardo”
  • 10. 2. Passive voice without agent.  The transformations are the same, but the agent does not appear in the passive voice sentence, because it is not important or it is not known. For example: In El Prado Museum a worker has found another version of the Mona Lisa. That worker is an anonymous person, so.
  • 11. We use a passive without agent. has been found “A different version of the Mona Lisa has been found in El Prado Museum.”
  • 12. Passive voice sentences without agent usually come from active sentences with subjects like: Somebody, someone, they, people, e tc… Subjects that do not give much important information.
  • 13. Examples of passive voice without agent are: 1.- People admire good singers. Passive: “Good singers are admired.” 2.- Somebody has broken the window. Passive: “The window has been broken.” 3.- They are building a new town hall. Passive: “A new town hall is being built.”
  • 14. 4.- Nobody has photographed the baby. Passive: “The baby hasn’t been photographed .” 5.- Someone stole the new car yesterday. Passive voice: “The new car was stolen yesterday.”
  • 15. Other examples of passive with agent: 1.-“The policemen caught the thief.” Passive: “The thief was caught by the policemen.” 2.- “The lions were eating a zebra.” Passive: “A zebra was being eaten by the lions.” 3.-”The Japanese have invented a new computer.” Passive: “A new computer has been invented by the Japanese.”
  • 16. 4.- “Spain won the World Cup in 2010.” Passive: “The World Cup was won by Spain in 2010.” 5.- “Mary is making the coffee.” Passive: “The coffee is being made by Mary.”
  • 17. TENSE FORM Present Simple Am, is, are Present continuous Am / is / are being Past Simple Was, were Past Continuous Was being, were being Present Perfect Has been, have been Future (will) Will be Conditional (would) Would be Goint to Am/ are / is going to be Modals Can be, must be, etc…
  • 18. Negative and Questions  The first element in the verb phrase is called the operator. For example: “The car was being stolen.” This is the operator The operator is in charge of questions and answers.
  • 19. “People spend a lot of money on stupid things.” AFFIRMATIVE “A lot of money is spent on stupid things” INTERROGATIVE “Is a lot of money spent on stupid things? NEGATIVE “A lot of money isn’t spent on stupid things.”