BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Grammar Active and passive voice



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BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Grammar Active and passive voice This is not a word-for-word transcript Hello and welcome to 6 Minute Grammar with me,. And me,. And in today s programme we re talking about Oww! You hit me!! That hurt! Yes,, I hit you. I hope there s a grammatical reason for that! Always,. I wouldn't hit you without a good reason. And the reason is, we re talking about active and passive voice today. And in the active voice we say hit : subject - verb - object. Like this: Oww! You hit me again!! Hmmm: All in the name of grammar. OK. You hit me. Subject - verb object. That's right. So, speaking grammatically, the subject that s me performs or does the action And the object of the verb that s me - receives or gets the action. bbclearningenglish.com Page 1 of 6

Another one? No. hit. But of course I'm more important than you, so I want to be at the beginning of the sentence. Let s say it this way: was hit by. Don't do it again. Ok - was hit by. We put the receiver of the verb at the beginning of the sentence, plus the verb to be and the past participle, to make a passive sentence: was hit by. So here s with some examples of active and passive sentences. First an active sentence: Millions of people use the internet. And with the receiver of the verb at the beginning of the sentence in the passive voice: The internet is used by millions of people. Active: A thief stole my car. Passive: My car was stolen by a thief. Active: Somebody rescued the child. Passive: bbclearningenglish.com Page 2 of 6

The child was rescued by somebody. Thanks. And now that has stopped hitting me, we can look at that last pair of sentences more closely. OK. Thank you. Right, in many situations, the passive sentence the child was rescued would sound more natural than somebody rescued the child now, that's if we feel the child is more important than the rescuer. Yes - and we don t know who rescued the child, so we don t need to say by somebody. It s just: The child was rescued. That s right - if you don t know who or what is doing the verb, or if it s not important, or if it s obvious, you can leave it out completely, like this: My car was stolen. Let s have another sentence in active voice: The storm destroyed the bridge. And here it is in passive voice: The bridge was destroyed by the storm. Here, the subject the storm is important, so we don t leave it out. IDENT You re listening to bbclearningenglish.com. bbclearningenglish.com Page 3 of 6

And we re talking about active and passive voice. That s right. When the thing receiving the action of the verb is important, you can show this importance, by putting it at the start of the sentence, and using the verb to be plus the past participle of the verb to make a passive form. And if the person or thing doing the verb is obvious, unimportant or unknown, you can leave it out. Now for our quiz. Which of these news headlines sounds better: is it a) 85-year-old Mary Hiker has climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. Or b) Mount Kilimanjaro has been climbed by an 85-year-old, Mary Hiker. Well they are grammatically correct, but the active sentenc a) is the best if you agree with me that the name and age of the climber is more important than the name of the mountain she climbed! 85-year-old Mary Hiker has climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. Next up option a): The police arrested the burglars and took them to the police station. And option b): The burglars were arrested and taken to the police station. bbclearningenglish.com Page 4 of 6

And the passive in option b) is best we can guess that the police arrested the burglars, so we don't need to mention them. The burglars were arrested and taken to the police station. And the last one - option a) William posted a photo of his birthday party on his webpage. And option b): A photo of William s birthday party was posted by him on his webpage. And option a) sounds much better William is most definitely the subject of this sentence! William posted a photo of his birthday party on his webpage. Now, here s a tip for using the passive voice in spoken English. You may hear people use the verb get instead of the verb be, like this: Your bike will get stolen if you don t lock it! Right. And if you hit your colleagues,? If you hit your colleagues for a non-grammatical reason,, you will get into trouble. OK, thank you very much, and there we are: the passive voice is made with an object, plus the verb to be, plus the past participle. And we use it when we re more interested in the object of a verb, or if the subject is bbclearningenglish.com Page 5 of 6

unknown or obvious. There s more about this on our website at bbclearningenglish.com. Join us again for more 6 Minute Grammar. Both Bye. bbclearningenglish.com Page 6 of 6