Passive Voice
[B1] Passive Voice explains how the action is received by the subject in English grammar. Learn how to form passive constructions, when to use them, and common mistakes.
Active vs Passive
In the active voice, the subject does the action and the focus is on the doer. In the passive voice, the subject receives the action and the focus is on the result, the receiver, or the action itself. Passive voice is useful when the doer is unknown, unimportant, obvious, or intentionally not mentioned. Many passive sentences can include the doer with a by phrase, but they do not have to.
Is this sentence active or passive? "The book was translated into three languages."
Passive Form
The passive voice is built with a form of be plus the past participle of the main verb. Tense, aspect, and modality are carried by the be verb or by modal verbs, while the main verb stays as a past participle. Only transitive verbs can normally form a passive because there must be an object to become the passive subject. The active object becomes the passive subject, and the active subject can be moved to an optional by phrase.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the sentence that correctly shows the passive form.
Tense in Passive
Choose the same time reference as in the active sentence, but express it through be or have plus been. Simple tenses use be directly, progressive uses being, and perfect uses been after have. The past participle does not change for tense. This helps keep meaning clear while shifting focus away from the doer.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which passive matches present continuous active "They are repairing the road."?
Modals in Passive
With modal verbs, keep the modal and use be plus the past participle. For perfect meaning with modals, use have been plus the past participle. This structure keeps the same modality like ability, permission, obligation, or possibility while changing the focus. The doer can still be added with a by phrase if needed.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the correct passive with a modal for "They must sign the form."
By Phrase
A by phrase names the agent, the person or thing that performs the action. Use it when the agent is important, surprising, or needed for clarity. Omit it when the agent is unknown, obvious, general, or unimportant, or when you intentionally want to avoid naming the agent. Even when included, the sentence focus usually stays on the passive subject.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
When should you include a by phrase?
Meaning and Focus
Passive voice changes emphasis: it highlights what happens to the receiver or what result matters. It can create a more formal, objective, or impersonal tone, common in academic and professional writing. Passive can also help paragraph flow by keeping the same topic in the subject position across sentences. Use passive when it improves clarity and coherence, not just to sound formal.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which situation best calls for passive voice?
Object Types
Some verbs take two objects, like give, send, or teach. In these cases, English often allows two passive options, depending on which object you want to emphasize. The indirect object can become the passive subject, especially with people, and the direct object can remain as the second object. Choosing between these options is mainly about which information you want in the subject position.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which two passive sentences correctly come from "She gave him a refund."?
Get Passive
English also uses get plus past participle as an alternative passive. Get passives are more informal and often suggest change, eventfulness, or that the subject is somehow involved or affected. They are common in spoken English and in situations that feel personal or unexpected. Use be passive for neutral, formal, or descriptive contexts, and get passive for more dynamic tone.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which sentence uses get passive appropriately and suggests a more eventful or personal tone?
Stative vs Eventive
Some be plus past participle forms look passive but function like adjectives that describe a state. Compare an event meaning where an action happened with a state meaning that describes a condition. Context, time expressions, and the possibility of adding a by phrase help you decide. This distinction matters because adjective like uses behave more like descriptions than actions.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Identify the reading: "The door was closed all day." โ is this stative or eventive?
When to Avoid
Passive voice can reduce clarity when it hides the agent or makes sentences long and abstract. In instructions, narratives, and persuasive writing, active voice often feels more direct and energetic. Avoid passive when the agent is essential for meaning, accountability, or precision. If you use passive, make sure the sentence still clearly answers who did what when needed.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Why avoid passive in cases of responsibility?

















