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I'd say sentence 11 is by far the most difficult of these. Nevertheless, the only thing you need to do is find the subject, verb and object in the active sentence, and then use the object as the subject in the passive sentence. Who made these
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
276 days ago
Simple Present, Constructions, Tenses, Negatives, Present Tenses, Negations, Simple Past, Past Tenses, Sentences, Simple Tenses, Affirmatives, Passive
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Hi Anon Yes, the verb "remain" is intransitive, and I wouldn't ever expect to see it used in the passive voice. Sentence 1 is OK, and sentence 2 is not. The verb "need" (meaning "must have") is transitive, and you
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Hi Anon 1) Today's work is done. -- Here, the participle (is it a participle, anyway?) seems to be an adjective. I don't think this is a passive tense (with no agent). 2) Today's work is done by Sue. -- Here, it seems to be clear it is
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how could we make sure whether we are looking at a passive sentence or a sentence with a "be" verb followed by an adjective in cases like this I think you have already solved your own problem. The other words in the sentence, like by Joe
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When you're gone How can I even try to go on? This is the lyric from Abba - S.O.S. I saw "be + PP". I was considering that was a Passive sentence. On the other hand, I think it may be Present Perfect... or something else.
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