Content tagged with "passive"

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The forms of the gerund

The gerund is an -ing form. It can be simple or perfect, active or passive:

The forms of the infinitive

An infinitive can be a to-infinitive or a bare infinitive (without to). There is no difference in meaning between them; some structures require a to-infinitive, while others call for a bare infinitive:

I ought to call them. (to-infinitive)
I had better call them. (bare infinitive)

The passive with GET

get + past participle

Get is often used instead of be in the passive voice in informal spoken English to refer to an action that happens by accident or unexpectedly:

The past participle used to form the passive voice

The past participle is used to form the passive voice (be + past participle) as well as the passive forms of infinitives, gerunds and the present and perfect participles. When used in this way, it is sometimes called the passive participle:

The use of the passive voice

The passive voice is more common in formal written English. It is often used in newspapers, academic and scientific writing, and reports, which attempt to be less personal. Most passive sentences do not have an agent, as the focus of the sentence is not on the doer of the action but on its recipient. As a rule, the agent is only mentioned in the passive sentence if it is important new information which cannot be omitted:

The Lord of the Rings was written by J. R. R. Tolkien.
While Tony was walking home last night, he was mugged by a group of young men, who stole his mobile phone and wallet.

The passive voice is preferred over the active in the following cases:

Verbs which cannot be used in the passive voice

Intransitive verbs

Intransitive verbs (verbs that do not take an object) cannot be passive. For this reason, the following sentences have no passive equivalents:

We arrived home late at night.
Did you sleep well?
He was running too fast.

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