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Published byReginald Copeland Modified over 9 years ago
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Active and Passive Voice VOICE indicates if the subject acts or is being acted upon. ACTIVE VOICE: Kristen wrote the report (the subject, Kristen, acts). PASSIVE VOICE: The report was written by Kristen (the subject, the report, was acted upon).
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Active and Passive Voice When you use the ACTIVE VOICE, you achieve greater precision when you answer who or what performs each action.
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Active and Passive Voice The problem with PASSIVE VOICE is that it begs this question: Who or what performed the action? Some passive sentences quickly answer the who or what question with a prepositional phrase: The report was written by Kristen. The preposition is wordy and identifies the actor too late.
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Active and Passive Voice To eliminate the passive voice: Find and mark the passive voice: it always has a “to be” verb (is, are, was, were, been …) plus another verb. Example: The report was written by Kristen.
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Active and Passive Voice To eliminate the passive voice: Answer the question who or what does the action. Example: Kristen wrote the report.
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Active and Passive Voice To eliminate the passive voice: Make the answer the subject of the verb. Example: Kristen wrote the report.
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