Passive Voice

passive voice examples

Passive Voice vs Active Voice (Interactive Examples)

Comparing the Passive Voice and Active Voice

To identify a verb in the passive voice, identify its subject and then determine that the subject is being acted upon. Compare these two examples of the passive voice and active voice (verbs in the passive verbs shaded):

Passive Voice Example

Active Voice Example

Examples of Verbs in the Passive Voice

"The Agent" Did It!

In a passive sentence, the person or thing carrying out the action (often called "the agent") is introduced with "by."

You Might Have to Invent a Subject

Sometimes, to turn a passive sentence into an active one, you have to create your own subject.

Video Lesson

Here is a video on active and passive sentences. video lesson

Are you a visual learner? Do you prefer video to text? Here is a list of all our grammar videos.

Why the Passive Voice Is Important

passive voice with spell checkers

Grammar checkers will often highlight passive sentences like they're errors. Here is an example: This happens because grammar checkers were written for the business environment, where bosses often demand clear, direct language, which is best delivered through the active voice. However, there are advantages to the passive voice, so don't be bullied by your grammar checker. If you like your passive sentence, it might be okay to ignore your grammar checker.

Five Good Reasons to Use the Passive Voice

(Reason 1) The passive voice is useful to avoid blame.

(Reason 2) The passive voice often shows a neutral or objective tone.

(Reason 3) The passive voice can be appropriate when the actor is unimportant, unknown, or obvious.

(Reason 4) The passive voice is useful to emphasize something by putting it at the start of your sentence.

(Reason 5) A passive-voice construction allows you to use the same subject twice.

Key Point

This page was written by Craig Shrives.