You're offline — cached pages and worlds still work
Drishti Innovations logo
Drishti Innovations

Core

Active and Passive Voice (Advanced): Core

Core

Active and Passive Voice (Advanced)

What you'll learn

  • Convert sentences between active voice (subject performs the action) and passive voice (subject receives the action) across different tenses.
  • Recognise when passive voice is more appropriate (e.g., when the doer is unknown or unimportant).

Key concepts

  1. Active voice: Subject + Verb + Object (e.g., "The cat chased the mouse.")
  2. Passive voice: Object + "to be" + Past Participle + "by" + Subject (e.g., "The mouse was chased by the cat.")
  3. Passive voice is common in formal/scientific writing where the focus is on the action, not who did it (e.g., "The experiment was conducted carefully.")
  4. The tense of "to be" in passive voice must match the tense of the original active sentence.

Worked example

Convert to passive voice: "The chef cooks the meal."

Active: The chef cooks the meal.
Passive: The meal is cooked by the chef.
(Present tense "is" matches present tense "cooks".)

Common mistakes

  • Using the wrong form of "to be" for the tense (e.g., using "is" for a past-tense sentence).
  • Forgetting the past participle form of irregular verbs (e.g., "wrote" → "written", not "writed").
  • Omitting "by + doer" when it's actually needed for clarity.

Quick check

  • Convert to passive: "She wrote a letter."
  • Convert to passive: "They will build a bridge."

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Active and Passive Voice (Advanced).

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

Master this topic with Drishti OS

Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.

Start Free Practice