B1 passive_voice 5 min read

Passive Voice: Basic Formation

Use the passive voice to highlight the action or the object when the 'who' doesn't matter.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Passive voice shifts focus from the doer to the receiver of the action.
  • Form it using 'be' + the past participle (V3) of the verb.
  • Use it when the doer is unknown, obvious, or less important.
  • Avoid using it with intransitive verbs like 'happen', 'go', or 'arrive'.

Quick Reference

Tense Active Example Passive Formation Passive Example
Present Simple She cleans the room. am/is/are + V3 The room is cleaned.
Past Simple He fixed the car. was/were + V3 The car was fixed.
Future Simple They will build it. will be + V3 It will be built.
Present Continuous They are making tea. am/is/are being + V3 Tea is being made.
Present Perfect I have sent the mail. has/have been + V3 The mail has been sent.
Modals You must sign this. modal + be + V3 This must be signed.

Key Examples

3 of 8
1

The coffee is served hot every morning.

El café se sirve caliente todas las mañanas.

2

The light bulb was invented by Edison.

La bombilla fue inventada por Edison.

3

My keys were stolen yesterday!

¡Me robaron las llaves ayer!

💡

The 'By Zombies' Test

If you can add 'by zombies' after the verb and the sentence still makes sense grammatically, it's passive! E.g., 'The town was destroyed (by zombies).'

⚠️

Watch for 'Happen'

Never use passive with verbs like 'happen', 'occur', or 'arrive'. You can't be 'arrived' by someone!

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Passive voice shifts focus from the doer to the receiver of the action.
  • Form it using 'be' + the past participle (V3) of the verb.
  • Use it when the doer is unknown, obvious, or less important.
  • Avoid using it with intransitive verbs like 'happen', 'go', or 'arrive'.

Overview

Imagine you walk into a room. You see a broken vase on the floor. You don't know who did it. You just see the result. You say, The vase was broken. This is the passive voice. In English, we usually start sentences with the person doing the action. We call this the active voice. But sometimes, the person isn't important. Sometimes, the action or the object is the real star. Think of the passive voice like a spotlight. It moves the focus from the 'doer' to the 'receiver'. It is a very common tool in English. You will hear it in news reports. You will see it in science books. You even use it when you want to be polite. It’s like a grammar magic trick. It lets you talk about things without blaming anyone.

How This Grammar Works

In a normal sentence, the structure is Subject + Verb + Object. For example, The chef cooked the pasta. Here, the chef is the hero. In the passive voice, we flip this around. The pasta moves to the front. The chef moves to the end or disappears. The sentence becomes The pasta was cooked. Now, the pasta is the most important part. You are telling us about the meal, not the person in the kitchen. This shift changes the feeling of the sentence. It feels more objective and balanced. It is like looking at a painting instead of watching the painter work. You focus on the finished product.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Creating the passive voice is like following a recipe. You need two main ingredients. First, you need the verb to be. Second, you need the past participle of your main verb.
  2. 2Identify the object of the active sentence.
  3. 3Move that object to the start of your new sentence.
  4. 4Check the tense of the original sentence (is it past, present, or future?).
  5. 5Use the verb to be in that same tense.
  6. 6Add the past participle (the 3rd form) of the main verb.
  7. 7Optional: Add by and the person who did it at the end.
  8. 8For example: The cat (Subject) chased (Verb) the mouse (Object).
  9. 9Step 1 & 2: The mouse...
  10. 10Step 3 & 4: Chased is past tense, so use was.
  11. 11Step 5: Past participle of chase is chased.
  12. 12Step 6: The mouse was chased by the cat.

When To Use It

Use the passive voice when the 'who' is a mystery. If someone stole your bike, you say My bike was stolen. You don't know the thief, so you can't name them! Use it when the 'who' is obvious. In a hospital, you might hear The patient was treated. We know a doctor did it, so we don't need to say it. Use it to be professional. In a job interview, you might say This project was completed on time. It sounds more impressive than just saying 'I did it'. It shows the result of your hard work. Use it for news and facts. The bridge was built in 1990. The focus is on the bridge's history.

When Not To Use It

Don't use the passive voice for everything. If you do, you will sound like a robot. Active voice is usually stronger and faster. Also, some verbs are 'lonely'. They don't have objects. These are called intransitive verbs. Verbs like happen, arrive, sleep, and die cannot be passive. You cannot say The accident was happened. That sounds like a glitch in a video game! Always check if the verb can take an object. If there is no object, there is no passive voice. Keep it simple when you want to be direct. If you are telling a friend a story, stick to the active voice. It keeps the energy high.

Common Mistakes

One big mistake is forgetting the verb to be. You might say The cake eaten. This sounds like caveman talk. You must say The cake WAS eaten. Another mistake is using the wrong form of the verb. People often use the past simple instead of the past participle. Don't say The letter was wrote. Say The letter was written. Think of the past participle as the 'passive partner'. They always go together. Finally, don't over-use by. If the person isn't important, leave them out. The window was broken by someone is unnecessary. Just say The window was broken. It’s cleaner and faster.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

Compare the passive voice to the active voice. Active: The wind blew the door open. Passive: The door was blown open by the wind. The active version is like an action movie. It’s fast. The passive version is like a documentary. It’s descriptive. You might also confuse passive voice with adjectives. The door is closed can be a description (the state of the door) or a passive action (someone closed it). Context is your best friend here. Look at the sentences around it. If there is a by phrase, it is definitely passive. If it describes a feeling, like I am bored, it’s usually an adjective.

Quick FAQ

Q. Is the passive voice bad?

A. No! It is just a different tool in your toolbox.

Q. Can I use it in any tense?

A. Yes, from present simple to future perfect.

Q. Is it more formal?

A. Generally, yes. It is very common in academic writing.

Q. How do I remember the past participle?

A. Practice! Many are regular (ending in -ed), but irregulars need memorizing.

Q. Can I use get instead of be?

A. In informal English, yes! I got hired is the same as I was hired.

Reference Table

Tense Active Example Passive Formation Passive Example
Present Simple She cleans the room. am/is/are + V3 The room is cleaned.
Past Simple He fixed the car. was/were + V3 The car was fixed.
Future Simple They will build it. will be + V3 It will be built.
Present Continuous They are making tea. am/is/are being + V3 Tea is being made.
Present Perfect I have sent the mail. has/have been + V3 The mail has been sent.
Modals You must sign this. modal + be + V3 This must be signed.
💡

The 'By Zombies' Test

If you can add 'by zombies' after the verb and the sentence still makes sense grammatically, it's passive! E.g., 'The town was destroyed (by zombies).'

⚠️

Watch for 'Happen'

Never use passive with verbs like 'happen', 'occur', or 'arrive'. You can't be 'arrived' by someone!

🎯

Polite Mistakes

Use passive to avoid blaming people. Instead of 'You broke the TV', try 'The TV was broken'. It saves friendships!

💬

News Speak

English news loves the passive voice. It makes reports sound objective and factual. Listen for it next time you watch the BBC or CNN.

Ejemplos

8
#1 Basic Present

The coffee is served hot every morning.

Focus: is served

El café se sirve caliente todas las mañanas.

Focuses on the routine service, not the waiter.

#2 Basic Past

The light bulb was invented by Edison.

Focus: was invented

La bombilla fue inventada por Edison.

The invention is the main topic here.

#3 Edge Case (No Agent)

My keys were stolen yesterday!

Focus: were stolen

¡Me robaron las llaves ayer!

We don't know who stole them, so passive is perfect.

#4 Formal Context

All applications must be submitted by Friday.

Focus: must be submitted

Todas las solicitudes deben ser enviadas para el viernes.

Common in official rules and instructions.

#5 Mistake Corrected

✗ The book was write by him. → ✓ The book was written by him.

Focus: was written

El libro fue escrito por él.

Always use the past participle (written), not the past simple (wrote).

#6 Mistake Corrected

✗ The glass broken. → ✓ The glass was broken.

Focus: was broken

El vaso se rompió.

You cannot skip the verb 'to be'.

#7 Advanced (Continuous)

The road is being repaired this week.

Focus: is being repaired

La carretera está siendo reparada esta semana.

Shows an action happening right now in passive form.

#8 Advanced (Modal)

The truth should be told.

Focus: should be told

Se debería decir la verdad.

Using 'should' to give advice in the passive.

Test Yourself

Change the active sentence to passive: 'The chef prepares the food.'

The food ___ by the chef.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Respuesta correcta: is prepared

Since 'prepares' is present simple, we use 'is' + the past participle 'prepared'.

Choose the correct form for a past event.

The Mona Lisa ___ by Leonardo da Vinci.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Respuesta correcta: was painted

We need the past tense of 'be' (was) and the past participle (painted).

Complete the sentence about a future action.

The results ___ next week.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Respuesta correcta: will be announced

For the future passive, we use 'will be' + the past participle.

🎉 Score: /3

Visual Learning Aids

Active vs. Passive Structure

Active Voice
Subject The baker
Verb makes
Object bread
Passive Voice
New Subject Bread
Be + V3 is made
By Agent by the baker

Can I make it Passive?

1

Does the verb have an object?

YES ↓
NO
Keep it Active (Intransitive)
2

Is the 'doer' important?

YES ↓
NO
Use Passive Voice
3

Do you want to emphasize the person?

YES ↓
NO
Use Passive with 'by'

Common Passive Tenses

Present

  • It is done
  • It is being done
🔙

Past

  • It was done
  • It had been done
🚀

Future

  • It will be done

Frequently Asked Questions

22 questions

It is a sentence where the subject receives the action instead of doing it. For example, in The cake was eaten, the cake isn't doing anything; it's just being delicious and then disappearing.

You combine a form of the verb to be with the past participle of the main verb. For example, is + cleaned or was + taken.

Use it when the person doing the action is unknown or unimportant. It's also great for focusing on the result, like The cure was discovered.

It is the 'third form' of a verb, like gone, seen, or finished. For regular verbs, it just ends in -ed.

Yes, just change be to was or were. For example, The letters were sent yesterday.

Absolutely! Use will be plus the past participle. The house will be painted next week.

Use is/are being. For example, The car is being washed right now.

No, only use by if the person who did the action adds important information. Most passive sentences don't need it.

No, because sleep is an intransitive verb. It doesn't have an object, so it can't be passive.

Usually, yes. In a text, you'd say I finished it. In a formal report, you'd say It was finished.

Some writers think it's less exciting because it hides the 'hero' of the sentence. However, in science and business, it's very strong and professional.

Move the school to the front, add was (past tense), and use built. Result: The school was built.

You can pick either one! They gave me a gift can become I was given a gift or A gift was given to me.

Yes, in casual speech. I got stuck in traffic is a common passive-style expression.

Yes. Use modal + be + V3. For example, It can be done or It must be finished.

Very! Headlines often even drop the be verb to save space, like Bank Robbed instead of The bank was robbed.

The agent is the person or thing that actually does the action, usually introduced by by. In The tree was blown down by the wind, the wind is the agent.

Sure! I was born in London is a passive sentence we use all the time.

Not usually. You can't say A car is had by me. Stick to active for possession.

Mix your sentences! Use active voice for stories and passive voice for facts or when you want to be tactful.

Yes, because it doesn't point fingers. The dishes weren't washed sounds nicer than You didn't wash the dishes.

Yes! Responsible for... is common, but Managed a team of five (active) is usually stronger than A team was managed (passive).

¿Te ha servido?
¡No hay comentarios todavía. Sé el primero en compartir tus ideas!

Empieza a aprender idiomas gratis

Empieza Gratis