The passive voice is a grammatical construction (specifically, a "voice"). The noun or noun phrase that would be the object of an active sentence (such as Our
troops defeated the enemy) appears as the subject of a sentence with passive voice (e.g. The enemy was defeated by our troops).
The subject of a sentence or clause featuring the passive voice
typically denotes the recipient of the action (the patient) rather than the performer (theagent). The passive voice in English is formed periphrastically: the usual form uses the auxiliary verb be (or get) together with the past participle of the main verb.
For example, Caesar was
stabbed by Brutus uses the
passive voice. The subject denotes the person (Caesar) affected by the action
of the verb. The agent is expressed here with the phrase by Brutus, but this can be
omitted. The equivalent sentence in active voice is Brutus stabbed
Caesar, in which the subject denotes the doer, or agent, Brutus. A sentence
featuring the passive voice is sometimes called a passive sentence, and a verb
phrase in passive voice is sometimes called a passive
verb.
English allows a number of passive constructions which are not possible
in many of the other languages with similar passive formation. These include
promotion of an indirect object to subject (as in Tom
was given a bag) and promotion of the complement of a preposition (as in Sue was operated
on, leaving a stranded
preposition).
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