The past perfect tense of "memorize" is "had memorized."
In transforming active voice to passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence, the verb is changed to a passive form (often with the auxiliary verb "to be" followed by the past participle), and the original subject may be omitted or placed at the end of the sentence with "by" before it. The tense of the sentence may also change accordingly.
To change from active voice to passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence, and the subject of the active sentence becomes the agent (or is omitted). The verb is then changed to the passive form (usually a form of "to be" + past participle). To change from passive to active voice, identify the subject performing the action and make it the subject of the active sentence, then reformulate the sentence using an active verb.
Told is a past tense verb, which is not the same as passive voice. Passive voice is created with a form of beand a past participle.Example of active voice:Betty told you a secret.Examples of passive voice:You were told a secret by Betty.You were told a secret.
The sentence is written in the present perfect tense. It is active voice because Rocky (the subject) has done something. If you write "The picture was taken by Rocky" that would be passive voice.
The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on So to change protect into the passive would be I protect (active)/ It is protected (passive)
Passive and active is not a tense, it is a voice. To make that sentence active, the doer of the action needs to be identified. Example: The repair man connected the battery to the mains.
The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on
No. The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I do (active)/it is done (passive) I did (active)/it was done (passive) I am doing (active)/it is being done (passive) I was doing (active)/it was being done (passive) and so on
The passive form of "What did he do with money?" is "What was done by him with money?". Here are the steps to work this out: Change the original active sentence from question form to declarative form: "He did what with money?" Then separate the tense from the verb in "did" to get "did do". Then change the active verb "do" to the passive form "be done", giving "did (past tense) be done". Then substitute the English irregular past form of "was" for "did be". In the passive, the original direct object ("what") becomes the new subject, and the original subject "he" becomes a prepositional phrase "by him" (adjusting the subject form "he" to the object form "him"). Now, we have "what was done by him with money". Ordinarily in finding the passive form of a question, the last step would be changing back from declarative form into question form, but in this case, the question form is the same, so we're done.
have/has flown This above is present perfect active not passive. Passive is be verb + past participle He has been flown to hospital.
For the most part; change the "me" to "I" and it's perfect. Also, it would be "better" if you said "Hollie and I picked the raspberries." That is called active tense, as opposed to passive tense.
You can change the active voice to the passive voice by changing an object to a subject, as follows: let us say that your original sentence is Fred has eaten dinner. That is the active voice. Dinner is the object. In the passive voice dinner becomes the subject, so the sentence becomes, dinner has been eaten. Fred, the original subject, has disappeared. We no longer know who ate the dinner, we merely know that it has been eaten by someone. The passive voice is therefore distinguished by being less informative. It is used by people who are trying to evade responsibility for something, or to avoid being specific. Something happened but we can't say who did it.ANDThe form of passive is be + past participleeg - been eaten, being eaten, was cooked, is cooked,The passive allows us to leave the 'doer' of the verb out of the sentence. This is useful if the 'doer' is not important. egThe Mona Lisa was painted in the 16th century.If you want to say who does the action of a passive verb add by + pronoun / noun phrase at the end of the sentence. This is called the agent.The dinner was eaten by Fred.This is useful if you want to emphasis the agent egThe painting is very valuable. It was painted by Van Gogh.
The past perfect tense of "memorize" is "had memorized."
In transforming active voice to passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence, the verb is changed to a passive form (often with the auxiliary verb "to be" followed by the past participle), and the original subject may be omitted or placed at the end of the sentence with "by" before it. The tense of the sentence may also change accordingly.
"Dave Has Just Painted The Garage" becomes "The garage has just been painted by Dave" (with the unusual initial capitalizations omitted). The general pattern is: Direct object in the active voice becomes subject in the passive voice; the verb in the active voice is replaced by the form of " to be" corresponding in tense to the original verb, followed by the past participle of the verb in the active voice; and the subject in the active voice becomes the object of the preposition "by" in the passive voice.
To change from active voice to passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence, and the subject of the active sentence becomes the agent (or is omitted). The verb is then changed to the passive form (usually a form of "to be" + past participle). To change from passive to active voice, identify the subject performing the action and make it the subject of the active sentence, then reformulate the sentence using an active verb.