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Charles Maxwell
Few people understand the difference between active and passive voice. Of course, professional writers and students of creative writing do. You might too. If you do, you are one of the lucky few. If you do not understand what is meant by active and passive voice, then this article is for you.
What is Active Voice?
What is the Problem with Passive Voice?
If the Passive Voice Is So Bad, Why Do People Use It So Often?
How Do You Spot Passive Voice?
Do All Passive Voice Sentences Use the âTo Beâ Verb?
Is Software Available to Identify Passive Voice?
How Do You Change Passive Voice into Active Voice?
When Is It Better to Use Passive Voice?
Should All Technical Writing Be in Passive Voice?
Videos
Conclusion
Call to Action
Further Reading
Credits
Even when people have learned the importance of active voice, they still fail to use it as often as needed. I have worked with engineers, accountants, managers, and technical writers who have attended well-run business writing courses, who still use too much passive voice. While collaborating on a daily basis with brilliant people preparing internal reports, marketing documents, and press releases, I see communications compromised by passive voice sentences that suffocate their message. For some reason, people just do not see how poorly their sentences read.
This is not to say that all passive voice sentences are badâfar from it. In some instances (such as this sentence), passive voice is preferred. Nevertheless, most business writing suffers from too much passive voice.
What is Active Voice?
In sentences using active voice, the subject performs the action of the verb. In contrast, with passive voice, the subject is acted upon by the verb. Stated another way, active voice makes the subject the agent, while with passive voice, the subject is consigned to be the receiver of action. For example:
Active voice
The chef
prepared
our dinner.
Passive voice
Our dinner
was prepared
by the chef.
In the 1st sentence with active voice, the chef (the subject of the sentence)
performs
the action of preparing dinner. While in the 2nd sentence with passive voice, the dinner
receives
the action. The doer of the action (if included) is appended in a prepositional phrase usually using the proposition
by
.
Passive voice generally is recognized by looking for auxiliary forms of the
to be
verb followed by the past participle of a verb. Auxiliary forms of
to be
include
is, are, was, were, will be, has been, have been
, etc. A past participle is the verb form used to form perfect and passive tenses. Regular past participles are formed by adding the ending â
ed
to English verbs. Irregular past participles include words such as:
bought
,
caught
,
fought
,
thought
,
meant
,
went
,
eaten
,
forgotten
,
given
,
written
,
known
,
made
, and
said
. You can find a full list of English irregular verbs and their past participles on Wikipedia at:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_irregular_verbs
.
The following sentence pairs show active and passive voice with some of the many verb tenses. Note the flow of the actionâ
from
the subject with active voice, and
to
the subject with passive voice.
Present tense
Active voice
The doctor
recommends
a better method.
Passive voice
A better method
is recommended
.
Past tense
Active voice
The doctor
recommended
a better method.
Passive
A better method
was recommended
.
Future tense
Active voice
The doctor
will recommend
a better method.
Passive voice
A better method
will be recommended
.
Present perfect tense
Active voice
The doctor
has recommended
a better method.
Passive voice
A better method
has been recommended
.
Past perfect tense (also called pluperfect)
Active voice
The doctor
had recommended
a better method.
Passive voice
A better method
had been recommended
.
What is the Problem with Passive Voice?
In the examples just considered, the passive voice sentences fail to tell us who recommended the better method. Was it the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, or some other knave? Of course, this can be corrected by adding a prepositional phrase, such as âby the nuclear physicistâ or âby the English teacherââwhoever made the recommendation. But, this requires a prepositional phrase, typically appended after the verb.
Generally, it requires more mental energy to understand passive voice sentences. This occurs, because the mind needs to hold the mental concepts represented by the sentence elements (i.e., subject, verb, object, prepositional phrases, etc.) in memory and assemble them to yield meaning. This becomes more taxing as passive voice sentences grow longer. For instance, consider the sentence:
It
is anticipated
that the company
will be extended
further credit after approval
is given
when the companyâs financial records
are reviewed
and it
is determined
if sufficient information
was provided
.
This sentence uses 31 words, and all the verbs are in passive voice. Â The sentence requires strong mental concentration to be understood.
Here is a rewrite with all verbs in active voice:
The company
anticipates
the bank
will extend
further credit after the loan officer
reviews
the companyâs financial records and
determines
if they
provide
sufficient information.
This shortens the sentence to 25 words. And, the arrangement of the ideas makes the sentence easier to understand.
Here are more examples:
Passive voice
If it
is desired
, a brief summary of the principles of the test method
may be given
.
Active voice
If you
desire
it, we
will summarize
the principles underlying the test method.
Passive voice
If the problem
could not be solved
, it probably
was caused
by storing the repair part improperly or the wrong tool
was used
to install it.
Active voice
If you
could not solve
the problem, the warehouse probably
stored
the repair part improperly or you
used
the wrong tool to install it.
Even short sentences benefit from transforming passive voice into active voice, although the degree of improvement is small. For example:
Passive voice
Results of the three experiments
are shown
in figure 1.
Active voice
Figure 1
shows
the results of the three experiments.
So, in general, active voice requires fewer words, is faster to read, and improves understanding.
If the Passive Voice Is So Bad, Why Do People Use It So Often?
Using passive voice is just a habit. Unfortunately, it seems to be an easy habit to make and a hard habit to break.
I believe we fall into the routine when we are composing. When we start drafting a documentâoften struggling to know what to say and then wrestling to convert our fleeting ideas into wordsâthe sentences come out as passive voice. Why this happens, I am not sure.
I do know that if you are aware of the problem, want to remedy it, and work to revise awkward passive voice sentences, you can communicate better using active voice.
Active voice will help your readers read your material quicker and understand it better.
How Do You Spot Passive Voice?
To identify passive voice, follow these steps:
Find a form of the
to be
verb
Determine if the
to be
verb is followed by a past participle
Add the phrase âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ after the past participle and decide if the sentence makes sense
If a phrase passes this test, it is passive voice.
When we apply the test to the sentence âThe application
was
posted,
â we see:
A form of the
to be
verb,
was
A past participle,
posted
The sentence is coherent when we add the phrase âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ
Thus, the sentence is passive voice.
I am in debt to Brady Sullivan for the phrase âthe Passive Voice Monster.â Variations of the 3rd step include adding any of the following phrases:
âby Johnâ
âby Maryâ
âby zombiesâ
The reason that both the 2nd and 3rd steps are needed is not all sentences that use the
to be
verb are passive voice. Consider the sentence:
Some
are
good.
Here, the verb
are
serves as a linking verb. It links the attribute âgoodâ to the subject âsome.â The sentence is in active voice.
There is another pitfall. Sometimes an
adjective
that looks like a past participle will follow the
to be
verb, such as:
Priscilla was
dedicated
.
In this sentence, âdedicatedâ is used as an
adjective
, not as a past participle. Therefore, the sentence is in active voice.
Here are more examples that
PASS
all three tests and thus are passive voice:
The book
was purchased
[by the Passive Voice Monster].
The cat
was chased
[by the Passive Voice Monster].
The experiment
was performed
many times [by the Passive Voice Monster].
On the other hand, here are active voice sentences, where the addition of âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ
FAILS
to yield an intelligible sentence:
 The flower petals are
variegated
[by the Passive Voice Monster].
 Priscilla is
dedicated
[by the Passive Voice Monster].
The test indicates the sentences are not passive, because the words
variegated
and
dedicated
are adjectives, not past participles.
Do All Passive Voice Sentences Use the âTo Beâ Verb?
No. Although most passive voice sentences use the
to be
verb, the verb
get
also can form the passive voice. For example:
The boy
got
hit.
If he
should get promoted
, heâll have to move.
Is Software Available to Identify Passive Voice?
Yes. Microsoft Word and online tools, such as Grammarly, recognize passive voice.
To activate this checking feature in older versions of Microsoft Word, go to:
File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Check grammar with spelling
AND
Writing Style / Grammar & Style / Settings / Style / Passive sentences
.Â
For newer versions of Word use:
File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Settings / Grammar & Refinements / Clarity and Conciseness / Passive voice
.
If you want to see the portion of your sentences that are in passive voice, activate readability statistics by going to:
File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Show readability statistics
.
(Running the readability statistics test on this article shows that 18% of the sentences reflect passive voice.)
Use the style prompts as suggestionsânot as absolute commands. The software will help you spot instances of passive voice. You then can decide if you want to keep them as they are or transform them into active voice.
How Do You Change Passive Voice into Active Voice?
To change passive voice to active voice:
Identify the new subject, usually by selecting the object (actual, implied, or newly furnished), and move it to the position of subject of the sentence
Move the old subject to the position of object
Remove the
to be
verb
Change the past participle into an active voice verb
Here is an example of a passive voice sentence and its transformation into active voice:
The fence often
is jumped
by the dog
.
Move âthe dogâ to the beginning of the sentence, and make it the subject
Move âthe fenceâ to the end of the sentence, and make it the object
Remove the
to be
verb âisâ
Change the past participle âjumpedâ to the appropriate active voice verb, which in this case is the present tense âjumpsâ
After this surgery, the sentence becomes:
The dog often
jumps
the fence.
When Is It Better to Use Passive Voice?
There are times when you will want to use passive voice. One instance is when the doer is unknown, irrelevant, or inconsequential or when you want to be vague about responsibility. Such as:
The key was lost.
The person who lost the key is unidentified, unimportant, or shirking blame. Besides ignoring or hiding who lost the key, passive voice emphasizes the state of the key being lost. This occurs because the first and the last phrase or words in a sentence receive emphasis. In this case, the subject (âkeyâ) and last word (âlostâ) are emphasized.
Another reason to use passive voice is to control focus. The strongest focus of most sentences is on the subject. With this in mind, sometimes to control focus, you will create passive voice sentences like:
I was promoted.
This focuses attention on the speaker (âIâ).
The alternative sentence âThe company promoted meâ focuses on the company.
With regard to controlling focus, I have heard it argued that passive voice sentences (such as âThe cat was chased by the dogâ) are better than their active voice complements (such as âThe dog chased the catâ) when the reader wants to emphasize the cat. However, a superior sentence is âThe cat fled from the dog.â This last sentence focuses on the cat and still uses active voice.
Another use for passive voice is to state a general truth. For example:
Honesty is regarded as the best policy.
Shakespeare is recognized as the greatest English playwright.
Sometimes, nothing is better than passive voice. For example, if you wanted to progressively defer information in a series of phrases or sentences that culminate in revealing a key piece of information, you could create a sentence like the following:
John
was told
by his coworker, who
was informed
by the department secretary, who
had been instructed
by the manager that the company was now bankrupt.
The verbs are in passive voice. Here is an alternative in active voice:
The manager
instructed
the department secretary, who
informed
a worker, who
told
John that the company was now bankrupt.
Assuming the writer wants to focus on John, the passive sentence is better, because it makes John the subject. As the reader progresses through the sentence, the chain of events moves backward from John to a coworker, to the secretary, to the manager. It is clear what the manager said. On the other hand, the active voice sentence moves forward in time with the manager first instructing the secretary, the secretary next informing the coworker, and the coworker finally telling John that the company was bankrupt. It is less clear what the manager said. We know that the coworker told John that the company is bankrupt, but is this exactly what the manager said?
Here are more notable examples of using passive voice effectively.
William Tyndale, who predominately used active voice in his translation of the New Testament, still used passive voice to powerful effect. This passage from Isaiah quoted by Luke (3:5-6) describes the mission of John the Baptist:
Every valley
shall be filled
,
and every mountain and hill
shall be brought low
.
And crooked things
shall be made
straight,
and the rough ways
shall be made
smooth.
And all flesh shall see the savior [which
was
]
sent
of God.
This type of construction places the focus on the subject of each sentence, i.e. on the
valley, mountain and hill, crooked things, rough ways,
and
all flesh.
Emphasis also falls on the last word of each passage:
filled, brought low, made straight, made smooth
, and
God
. Ending the passage with the word
God
places even more emphasis on deity. (Note that the words
which was
in brackets are my inference.)
The US Declaration of Independence also makes good use of passive voice:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men
are created
equal, that they
are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable RightsâŚ
Should All Technical Writing Be in Passive Voice?
Some instructors and some technical style guides recommend the use of passive voice for technical and scientific writing. While there is a place for eliminating the first person in technical writing, it is still possible to use active voice, and with few exceptions, active voice will improve technical writing. For example:
Passive voice
Increased yield was indicated.
Active voice
The experiments indicated increased yield.
Passive voice
It was observedâŚ
Active voice
The tests illustratedâŚ
Videos
The following short video pokes fun at passive voice.
The following video is a lot of fun. Brady Sullivan shows how to kill the Passive Voice Monsterâor at least confine him to his proper place.
The following video by the Writing Center at Texas A&M University briefly summarizes active and passive voice.
In the following three videos, English instructors Adam and Emma provide detailed discussions of active and passive voice.
Conclusion
Most writing in business and education suffers from too much passive voice. Passive voice is not wrong, but you can make your writing stronger by using active voice as much as possible.Â
Spot passive voice by looking for a to be verb followed by a past participle and applying the âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ test.
Call to Action
Adjust your settings on Microsoft Word to flag passive voice, or try an online grammar-checking tool. Check to see how you are doing. How often do you use passive voice? In some instances, could you replace passive voice with active voice?
Further Reading
âEnglish passive voice,â Wikipedia,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_passive_voice
 âPassive Voice: When to Use It and When to Avoid It,â University of Toronto, Tim Corson and Rebecca Smollett, University College Writing Centre,
https://advice.writing.utoronto.ca/revising/passive-voice/
âPassive Voice,â EnglishClub.com,
https://www.englishclub.com/grammar/passive-voice.htm
âPassive Voice,â University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Writing Center,
https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/passive-voice/
âActive Versus,â Purdue University, Online Writing Lab (OWL),
https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/academic_writing/active_and_passive_voice/active_versus_passive_voice.html
Credits
William Tyndale, New Testament (1534 edition), Luke 3:5-6, modern spelling and punctuation. |
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## Posts
# Understanding Active and Passive Voice
4-Jan-2020 [Charles Maxwell](https://toweringskills.com/author/admin/ "Posts by Charles Maxwell")
Last Updated on 11-Oct-2024 by [Charles Maxwell](https://toweringskills.com/)

Few people understand the difference between active and passive voice. Of course, professional writers and students of creative writing do. You might too. If you do, you are one of the lucky few. If you do not understand what is meant by active and passive voice, then this article is for you.
1. [What is Active Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#what-is-active-voice)
2. [What is the Problem with Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#what-is-the-problem-with-passive-voice)
3. [If the Passive Voice Is So Bad, Why Do People Use It So Often?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#if-the-passive-voice-is-so-bad-why-do-people-use-it-so-often)
4. [How Do You Spot Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#how-do-you-spot-passive-voice)
5. [Do All Passive Voice Sentences Use the âTo Beâ Verb?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#do-all-passive-voice-sentences-use-the-to-be-verb)
6. [Is Software Available to Identify Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#is-software-available-to-identify-passive-voice)
7. [How Do You Change Passive Voice into Active Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#how-do-you-change-passive-voice-into-active-voice)
8. [When Is It Better to Use Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#when-is-it-better-to-use-passive-voice)
9. [Should All Technical Writing Be in Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#should-all-technical-writing-be-in-passive-voice)
10. [Videos](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#videos)
11. [Conclusion](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#conclusion)
12. [Call to Action](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#call-to-action)
13. [Further Reading](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#further-reading)
14. [Credits](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#credits)
Even when people have learned the importance of active voice, they still fail to use it as often as needed. I have worked with engineers, accountants, managers, and technical writers who have attended well-run business writing courses, who still use too much passive voice. While collaborating on a daily basis with brilliant people preparing internal reports, marketing documents, and press releases, I see communications compromised by passive voice sentences that suffocate their message. For some reason, people just do not see how poorly their sentences read.
This is not to say that all passive voice sentences are badâfar from it. In some instances (such as this sentence), passive voice is preferred. Nevertheless, most business writing suffers from too much passive voice.
### What is Active Voice?
In sentences using active voice, the subject performs the action of the verb. In contrast, with passive voice, the subject is acted upon by the verb. Stated another way, active voice makes the subject the agent, while with passive voice, the subject is consigned to be the receiver of action. For example:
- Active voice
The chef
prepared
our dinner.
- Passive voice
Our dinner
was prepared
by the chef.
In the 1st sentence with active voice, the chef (the subject of the sentence) performs the action of preparing dinner. While in the 2nd sentence with passive voice, the dinner receives the action. The doer of the action (if included) is appended in a prepositional phrase usually using the proposition *by*.
Passive voice generally is recognized by looking for auxiliary forms of the *to be* verb followed by the past participle of a verb. Auxiliary forms of *to be* include *is, are, was, were, will be, has been, have been*, etc. A past participle is the verb form used to form perfect and passive tenses. Regular past participles are formed by adding the ending â*ed* to English verbs. Irregular past participles include words such as: *bought*, *caught*, *fought*, *thought*, *meant*, *went*, *eaten*, *forgotten*, *given*, *written*, *known*, *made*, and *said*. You can find a full list of English irregular verbs and their past participles on Wikipedia at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_irregular_verbs>.
The following sentence pairs show active and passive voice with some of the many verb tenses. Note the flow of the actionâfrom the subject with active voice, and to the subject with passive voice.
- **Present tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
recommends
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
is recommended
.
- **Past tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
recommended
a better method.
- Passive
A better method
was recommended
.
- **Future tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
will recommend
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
will be recommended
.
- **Present perfect tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
has recommended
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
has been recommended
.
- **Past perfect tense (also called pluperfect)**
- Active voice
The doctor
had recommended
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
had been recommended
.
### What is the Problem with Passive Voice?
In the examples just considered, the passive voice sentences fail to tell us who recommended the better method. Was it the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, or some other knave? Of course, this can be corrected by adding a prepositional phrase, such as âby the nuclear physicistâ or âby the English teacherââwhoever made the recommendation. But, this requires a prepositional phrase, typically appended after the verb.
Generally, it requires more mental energy to understand passive voice sentences. This occurs, because the mind needs to hold the mental concepts represented by the sentence elements (i.e., subject, verb, object, prepositional phrases, etc.) in memory and assemble them to yield meaning. This becomes more taxing as passive voice sentences grow longer. For instance, consider the sentence:
- It
is anticipated
that the company
will be extended
further credit after approval
is given
when the companyâs financial records
are reviewed
and it
is determined
if sufficient information
was provided
.
This sentence uses 31 words, and all the verbs are in passive voice. The sentence requires strong mental concentration to be understood.
Here is a rewrite with all verbs in active voice:
- The company
anticipates
the bank
will extend
further credit after the loan officer
reviews
the companyâs financial records and
determines
if they
provide
sufficient information.
This shortens the sentence to 25 words. And, the arrangement of the ideas makes the sentence easier to understand.
Here are more examples:
- Passive voice
If it
is desired
, a brief summary of the principles of the test method
may be given
.
- Active voice
If you
desire
it, we
will summarize
the principles underlying the test method.
- Passive voice
If the problem
could not be solved
, it probably
was caused
by storing the repair part improperly or the wrong tool
was used
to install it.
- Active voice
If you
could not solve
the problem, the warehouse probably
stored
the repair part improperly or you
used
the wrong tool to install it.
Even short sentences benefit from transforming passive voice into active voice, although the degree of improvement is small. For example:
- Passive voice
Results of the three experiments
are shown
in figure 1.
- Active voice
Figure 1
shows
the results of the three experiments.
So, in general, active voice requires fewer words, is faster to read, and improves understanding.
### If the Passive Voice Is So Bad, Why Do People Use It So Often?
Using passive voice is just a habit. Unfortunately, it seems to be an easy habit to make and a hard habit to break.
I believe we fall into the routine when we are composing. When we start drafting a documentâoften struggling to know what to say and then wrestling to convert our fleeting ideas into wordsâthe sentences come out as passive voice. Why this happens, I am not sure.
I do know that if you are aware of the problem, want to remedy it, and work to revise awkward passive voice sentences, you can communicate better using active voice.
Active voice will help your readers read your material quicker and understand it better.
### How Do You Spot Passive Voice?
To identify passive voice, follow these steps:
1. Find a form of the *to be* verb
2. Determine if the *to be* verb is followed by a past participle
3. Add the phrase âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ after the past participle and decide if the sentence makes sense
If a phrase passes this test, it is passive voice.
When we apply the test to the sentence âThe application was
posted,â we see:
1. A form of the *to be* verb, *was*
2. A past participle, *posted*
3. The sentence is coherent when we add the phrase âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ
Thus, the sentence is passive voice.
I am in debt to Brady Sullivan for the phrase âthe Passive Voice Monster.â Variations of the 3rd step include adding any of the following phrases:
- âby Johnâ
- âby Maryâ
- âby zombiesâ
The reason that both the 2nd and 3rd steps are needed is not all sentences that use the *to be* verb are passive voice. Consider the sentence:
- Some
are
good.
Here, the verb *are* serves as a linking verb. It links the attribute âgoodâ to the subject âsome.â The sentence is in active voice.
There is another pitfall. Sometimes an adjective that looks like a past participle will follow the *to be* verb, such as:
- Priscilla was
dedicated
.
In this sentence, âdedicatedâ is used as an adjective, not as a past participle. Therefore, the sentence is in active voice.
Here are more examples that **PASS** all three tests and thus are passive voice:
- The book
was purchased
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
- The cat
was chased
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
- The experiment
was performed
many times \[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
On the other hand, here are active voice sentences, where the addition of âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ **FAILS** to yield an intelligible sentence:
- The flower petals are
variegated
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
- Priscilla is
dedicated
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
The test indicates the sentences are not passive, because the words *variegated* and *dedicated* are adjectives, not past participles.
### Do All Passive Voice Sentences Use the âTo Beâ Verb?
No. Although most passive voice sentences use the *to be* verb, the verb *get* also can form the passive voice. For example:
- The boy
got
hit.
- If he
should get promoted
, heâll have to move.
### Is Software Available to Identify Passive Voice?
Yes. Microsoft Word and online tools, such as Grammarly, recognize passive voice.
To activate this checking feature in older versions of Microsoft Word, go to: **File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Check grammar with spelling AND Writing Style / Grammar & Style / Settings / Style / Passive sentences**.
For newer versions of Word use: **File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Settings / Grammar & Refinements / Clarity and Conciseness / Passive voice**.
If you want to see the portion of your sentences that are in passive voice, activate readability statistics by going to: **File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Show readability statistics**.
(Running the readability statistics test on this article shows that 18% of the sentences reflect passive voice.)
Use the style prompts as suggestionsânot as absolute commands. The software will help you spot instances of passive voice. You then can decide if you want to keep them as they are or transform them into active voice.
### How Do You Change Passive Voice into Active Voice?
To change passive voice to active voice:
1. Identify the new subject, usually by selecting the object (actual, implied, or newly furnished), and move it to the position of subject of the sentence
2. Move the old subject to the position of object
3. Remove the *to be* verb
4. Change the past participle into an active voice verb
Here is an example of a passive voice sentence and its transformation into active voice:
- The fence often
is jumped
by the dog
.
1. Move âthe dogâ to the beginning of the sentence, and make it the subject
2. Move âthe fenceâ to the end of the sentence, and make it the object
3. Remove the *to be* verb âisâ
4. Change the past participle âjumpedâ to the appropriate active voice verb, which in this case is the present tense âjumpsâ
After this surgery, the sentence becomes:
- The dog often
jumps
the fence.
### When Is It Better to Use Passive Voice?
There are times when you will want to use passive voice. One instance is when the doer is unknown, irrelevant, or inconsequential or when you want to be vague about responsibility. Such as:
- The key was lost.
The person who lost the key is unidentified, unimportant, or shirking blame. Besides ignoring or hiding who lost the key, passive voice emphasizes the state of the key being lost. This occurs because the first and the last phrase or words in a sentence receive emphasis. In this case, the subject (âkeyâ) and last word (âlostâ) are emphasized.
Another reason to use passive voice is to control focus. The strongest focus of most sentences is on the subject. With this in mind, sometimes to control focus, you will create passive voice sentences like:
- I was promoted.
This focuses attention on the speaker (âIâ).
The alternative sentence âThe company promoted meâ focuses on the company.
With regard to controlling focus, I have heard it argued that passive voice sentences (such as âThe cat was chased by the dogâ) are better than their active voice complements (such as âThe dog chased the catâ) when the reader wants to emphasize the cat. However, a superior sentence is âThe cat fled from the dog.â This last sentence focuses on the cat and still uses active voice.
Another use for passive voice is to state a general truth. For example:
- Honesty is regarded as the best policy.
- Shakespeare is recognized as the greatest English playwright.
Sometimes, nothing is better than passive voice. For example, if you wanted to progressively defer information in a series of phrases or sentences that culminate in revealing a key piece of information, you could create a sentence like the following:
- John
was told
by his coworker, who
was informed
by the department secretary, who
had been instructed
by the manager that the company was now bankrupt.
The verbs are in passive voice. Here is an alternative in active voice:
- The manager
instructed
the department secretary, who
informed
a worker, who
told
John that the company was now bankrupt.
Assuming the writer wants to focus on John, the passive sentence is better, because it makes John the subject. As the reader progresses through the sentence, the chain of events moves backward from John to a coworker, to the secretary, to the manager. It is clear what the manager said. On the other hand, the active voice sentence moves forward in time with the manager first instructing the secretary, the secretary next informing the coworker, and the coworker finally telling John that the company was bankrupt. It is less clear what the manager said. We know that the coworker told John that the company is bankrupt, but is this exactly what the manager said?
Here are more notable examples of using passive voice effectively.
William Tyndale, who predominately used active voice in his translation of the New Testament, still used passive voice to powerful effect. This passage from Isaiah quoted by Luke (3:5-6) describes the mission of John the Baptist:
Every valley shall be filled,
and every mountain and hill shall be brought low.
And crooked things shall be made straight,
and the rough ways shall be made smooth.
And all flesh shall see the savior \[which was\] sent of God.
This type of construction places the focus on the subject of each sentence, i.e. on the *valley, mountain and hill, crooked things, rough ways,* and *all flesh.* Emphasis also falls on the last word of each passage: *filled, brought low, made straight, made smooth*, and *God*. Ending the passage with the word *God* places even more emphasis on deity. (Note that the words *which was* in brackets are my inference.)
The US Declaration of Independence also makes good use of passive voice:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable RightsâŚ
### Should All Technical Writing Be in Passive Voice?
Some instructors and some technical style guides recommend the use of passive voice for technical and scientific writing. While there is a place for eliminating the first person in technical writing, it is still possible to use active voice, and with few exceptions, active voice will improve technical writing. For example:
- Passive voice
Increased yield was indicated.
- Active voice
The experiments indicated increased yield.
- Passive voice
It was observedâŚ
- Active voice
The tests illustratedâŚ
### Videos
The following short video pokes fun at passive voice.
The following video is a lot of fun. Brady Sullivan shows how to kill the Passive Voice Monsterâor at least confine him to his proper place.
The following video by the Writing Center at Texas A\&M University briefly summarizes active and passive voice.
In the following three videos, English instructors Adam and Emma provide detailed discussions of active and passive voice.
***
***
### Conclusion
Most writing in business and education suffers from too much passive voice. Passive voice is not wrong, but you can make your writing stronger by using active voice as much as possible.
Spot passive voice by looking for a to be verb followed by a past participle and applying the âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ test.
### Call to Action
Adjust your settings on Microsoft Word to flag passive voice, or try an online grammar-checking tool. Check to see how you are doing. How often do you use passive voice? In some instances, could you replace passive voice with active voice?
### Further Reading
âEnglish passive voice,â Wikipedia, <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_passive_voice>
âPassive Voice: When to Use It and When to Avoid It,â University of Toronto, Tim Corson and Rebecca Smollett, University College Writing Centre, <https://advice.writing.utoronto.ca/revising/passive-voice/>
âPassive Voice,â EnglishClub.com, <https://www.englishclub.com/grammar/passive-voice.htm>
âPassive Voice,â University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Writing Center, <https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/passive-voice/>
âActive Versus,â Purdue University, Online Writing Lab (OWL), <https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/academic_writing/active_and_passive_voice/active_versus_passive_voice.html>
### Credits
William Tyndale, New Testament (1534 edition), Luke 3:5-6, modern spelling and punctuation.
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| Readable Markdown | Last Updated on 11-Oct-2024 by [Charles Maxwell](https://toweringskills.com/)

Few people understand the difference between active and passive voice. Of course, professional writers and students of creative writing do. You might too. If you do, you are one of the lucky few. If you do not understand what is meant by active and passive voice, then this article is for you.
1. [What is Active Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#what-is-active-voice)
2. [What is the Problem with Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#what-is-the-problem-with-passive-voice)
3. [If the Passive Voice Is So Bad, Why Do People Use It So Often?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#if-the-passive-voice-is-so-bad-why-do-people-use-it-so-often)
4. [How Do You Spot Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#how-do-you-spot-passive-voice)
5. [Do All Passive Voice Sentences Use the âTo Beâ Verb?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#do-all-passive-voice-sentences-use-the-to-be-verb)
6. [Is Software Available to Identify Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#is-software-available-to-identify-passive-voice)
7. [How Do You Change Passive Voice into Active Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#how-do-you-change-passive-voice-into-active-voice)
8. [When Is It Better to Use Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#when-is-it-better-to-use-passive-voice)
9. [Should All Technical Writing Be in Passive Voice?](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#should-all-technical-writing-be-in-passive-voice)
10. [Videos](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#videos)
11. [Conclusion](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#conclusion)
12. [Call to Action](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#call-to-action)
13. [Further Reading](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#further-reading)
14. [Credits](https://toweringskills.com/writing/active-and-passive-voice/#credits)
Even when people have learned the importance of active voice, they still fail to use it as often as needed. I have worked with engineers, accountants, managers, and technical writers who have attended well-run business writing courses, who still use too much passive voice. While collaborating on a daily basis with brilliant people preparing internal reports, marketing documents, and press releases, I see communications compromised by passive voice sentences that suffocate their message. For some reason, people just do not see how poorly their sentences read.
This is not to say that all passive voice sentences are badâfar from it. In some instances (such as this sentence), passive voice is preferred. Nevertheless, most business writing suffers from too much passive voice.
### What is Active Voice?
In sentences using active voice, the subject performs the action of the verb. In contrast, with passive voice, the subject is acted upon by the verb. Stated another way, active voice makes the subject the agent, while with passive voice, the subject is consigned to be the receiver of action. For example:
- Active voice
The chef
prepared
our dinner.
- Passive voice
Our dinner
was prepared
by the chef.
In the 1st sentence with active voice, the chef (the subject of the sentence) performs the action of preparing dinner. While in the 2nd sentence with passive voice, the dinner receives the action. The doer of the action (if included) is appended in a prepositional phrase usually using the proposition *by*.
Passive voice generally is recognized by looking for auxiliary forms of the *to be* verb followed by the past participle of a verb. Auxiliary forms of *to be* include *is, are, was, were, will be, has been, have been*, etc. A past participle is the verb form used to form perfect and passive tenses. Regular past participles are formed by adding the ending â*ed* to English verbs. Irregular past participles include words such as: *bought*, *caught*, *fought*, *thought*, *meant*, *went*, *eaten*, *forgotten*, *given*, *written*, *known*, *made*, and *said*. You can find a full list of English irregular verbs and their past participles on Wikipedia at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_irregular_verbs>.
The following sentence pairs show active and passive voice with some of the many verb tenses. Note the flow of the actionâfrom the subject with active voice, and to the subject with passive voice.
- **Present tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
recommends
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
is recommended
.
- **Past tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
recommended
a better method.
- Passive
A better method
was recommended
.
- **Future tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
will recommend
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
will be recommended
.
- **Present perfect tense**
- Active voice
The doctor
has recommended
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
has been recommended
.
- **Past perfect tense (also called pluperfect)**
- Active voice
The doctor
had recommended
a better method.
- Passive voice
A better method
had been recommended
.
### What is the Problem with Passive Voice?
In the examples just considered, the passive voice sentences fail to tell us who recommended the better method. Was it the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, or some other knave? Of course, this can be corrected by adding a prepositional phrase, such as âby the nuclear physicistâ or âby the English teacherââwhoever made the recommendation. But, this requires a prepositional phrase, typically appended after the verb.
Generally, it requires more mental energy to understand passive voice sentences. This occurs, because the mind needs to hold the mental concepts represented by the sentence elements (i.e., subject, verb, object, prepositional phrases, etc.) in memory and assemble them to yield meaning. This becomes more taxing as passive voice sentences grow longer. For instance, consider the sentence:
- It
is anticipated
that the company
will be extended
further credit after approval
is given
when the companyâs financial records
are reviewed
and it
is determined
if sufficient information
was provided
.
This sentence uses 31 words, and all the verbs are in passive voice. The sentence requires strong mental concentration to be understood.
Here is a rewrite with all verbs in active voice:
- The company
anticipates
the bank
will extend
further credit after the loan officer
reviews
the companyâs financial records and
determines
if they
provide
sufficient information.
This shortens the sentence to 25 words. And, the arrangement of the ideas makes the sentence easier to understand.
Here are more examples:
- Passive voice
If it
is desired
, a brief summary of the principles of the test method
may be given
.
- Active voice
If you
desire
it, we
will summarize
the principles underlying the test method.
- Passive voice
If the problem
could not be solved
, it probably
was caused
by storing the repair part improperly or the wrong tool
was used
to install it.
- Active voice
If you
could not solve
the problem, the warehouse probably
stored
the repair part improperly or you
used
the wrong tool to install it.
Even short sentences benefit from transforming passive voice into active voice, although the degree of improvement is small. For example:
- Passive voice
Results of the three experiments
are shown
in figure 1.
- Active voice
Figure 1
shows
the results of the three experiments.
So, in general, active voice requires fewer words, is faster to read, and improves understanding.
### If the Passive Voice Is So Bad, Why Do People Use It So Often?
Using passive voice is just a habit. Unfortunately, it seems to be an easy habit to make and a hard habit to break.
I believe we fall into the routine when we are composing. When we start drafting a documentâoften struggling to know what to say and then wrestling to convert our fleeting ideas into wordsâthe sentences come out as passive voice. Why this happens, I am not sure.
I do know that if you are aware of the problem, want to remedy it, and work to revise awkward passive voice sentences, you can communicate better using active voice.
Active voice will help your readers read your material quicker and understand it better.
### How Do You Spot Passive Voice?
To identify passive voice, follow these steps:
1. Find a form of the *to be* verb
2. Determine if the *to be* verb is followed by a past participle
3. Add the phrase âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ after the past participle and decide if the sentence makes sense
If a phrase passes this test, it is passive voice.
When we apply the test to the sentence âThe application was
posted,â we see:
1. A form of the *to be* verb, *was*
2. A past participle, *posted*
3. The sentence is coherent when we add the phrase âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ
Thus, the sentence is passive voice.
I am in debt to Brady Sullivan for the phrase âthe Passive Voice Monster.â Variations of the 3rd step include adding any of the following phrases:
- âby Johnâ
- âby Maryâ
- âby zombiesâ
The reason that both the 2nd and 3rd steps are needed is not all sentences that use the *to be* verb are passive voice. Consider the sentence:
- Some
are
good.
Here, the verb *are* serves as a linking verb. It links the attribute âgoodâ to the subject âsome.â The sentence is in active voice.
There is another pitfall. Sometimes an adjective that looks like a past participle will follow the *to be* verb, such as:
- Priscilla was
dedicated
.
In this sentence, âdedicatedâ is used as an adjective, not as a past participle. Therefore, the sentence is in active voice.
Here are more examples that **PASS** all three tests and thus are passive voice:
- The book
was purchased
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
- The cat
was chased
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
- The experiment
was performed
many times \[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
On the other hand, here are active voice sentences, where the addition of âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ **FAILS** to yield an intelligible sentence:
- The flower petals are
variegated
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
- Priscilla is
dedicated
\[by the Passive Voice Monster\].
The test indicates the sentences are not passive, because the words *variegated* and *dedicated* are adjectives, not past participles.
### Do All Passive Voice Sentences Use the âTo Beâ Verb?
No. Although most passive voice sentences use the *to be* verb, the verb *get* also can form the passive voice. For example:
- The boy
got
hit.
- If he
should get promoted
, heâll have to move.
### Is Software Available to Identify Passive Voice?
Yes. Microsoft Word and online tools, such as Grammarly, recognize passive voice.
To activate this checking feature in older versions of Microsoft Word, go to: **File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Check grammar with spelling AND Writing Style / Grammar & Style / Settings / Style / Passive sentences**.
For newer versions of Word use: **File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Settings / Grammar & Refinements / Clarity and Conciseness / Passive voice**.
If you want to see the portion of your sentences that are in passive voice, activate readability statistics by going to: **File / Options / Proofing / When correcting spelling and grammar in Word / Show readability statistics**.
(Running the readability statistics test on this article shows that 18% of the sentences reflect passive voice.)
Use the style prompts as suggestionsânot as absolute commands. The software will help you spot instances of passive voice. You then can decide if you want to keep them as they are or transform them into active voice.
### How Do You Change Passive Voice into Active Voice?
To change passive voice to active voice:
1. Identify the new subject, usually by selecting the object (actual, implied, or newly furnished), and move it to the position of subject of the sentence
2. Move the old subject to the position of object
3. Remove the *to be* verb
4. Change the past participle into an active voice verb
Here is an example of a passive voice sentence and its transformation into active voice:
- The fence often
is jumped
by the dog
.
1. Move âthe dogâ to the beginning of the sentence, and make it the subject
2. Move âthe fenceâ to the end of the sentence, and make it the object
3. Remove the *to be* verb âisâ
4. Change the past participle âjumpedâ to the appropriate active voice verb, which in this case is the present tense âjumpsâ
After this surgery, the sentence becomes:
- The dog often
jumps
the fence.
### When Is It Better to Use Passive Voice?
There are times when you will want to use passive voice. One instance is when the doer is unknown, irrelevant, or inconsequential or when you want to be vague about responsibility. Such as:
- The key was lost.
The person who lost the key is unidentified, unimportant, or shirking blame. Besides ignoring or hiding who lost the key, passive voice emphasizes the state of the key being lost. This occurs because the first and the last phrase or words in a sentence receive emphasis. In this case, the subject (âkeyâ) and last word (âlostâ) are emphasized.
Another reason to use passive voice is to control focus. The strongest focus of most sentences is on the subject. With this in mind, sometimes to control focus, you will create passive voice sentences like:
- I was promoted.
This focuses attention on the speaker (âIâ).
The alternative sentence âThe company promoted meâ focuses on the company.
With regard to controlling focus, I have heard it argued that passive voice sentences (such as âThe cat was chased by the dogâ) are better than their active voice complements (such as âThe dog chased the catâ) when the reader wants to emphasize the cat. However, a superior sentence is âThe cat fled from the dog.â This last sentence focuses on the cat and still uses active voice.
Another use for passive voice is to state a general truth. For example:
- Honesty is regarded as the best policy.
- Shakespeare is recognized as the greatest English playwright.
Sometimes, nothing is better than passive voice. For example, if you wanted to progressively defer information in a series of phrases or sentences that culminate in revealing a key piece of information, you could create a sentence like the following:
- John
was told
by his coworker, who
was informed
by the department secretary, who
had been instructed
by the manager that the company was now bankrupt.
The verbs are in passive voice. Here is an alternative in active voice:
- The manager
instructed
the department secretary, who
informed
a worker, who
told
John that the company was now bankrupt.
Assuming the writer wants to focus on John, the passive sentence is better, because it makes John the subject. As the reader progresses through the sentence, the chain of events moves backward from John to a coworker, to the secretary, to the manager. It is clear what the manager said. On the other hand, the active voice sentence moves forward in time with the manager first instructing the secretary, the secretary next informing the coworker, and the coworker finally telling John that the company was bankrupt. It is less clear what the manager said. We know that the coworker told John that the company is bankrupt, but is this exactly what the manager said?
Here are more notable examples of using passive voice effectively.
William Tyndale, who predominately used active voice in his translation of the New Testament, still used passive voice to powerful effect. This passage from Isaiah quoted by Luke (3:5-6) describes the mission of John the Baptist:
Every valley shall be filled,
and every mountain and hill shall be brought low.
And crooked things shall be made straight,
and the rough ways shall be made smooth.
And all flesh shall see the savior \[which was\] sent of God.
This type of construction places the focus on the subject of each sentence, i.e. on the *valley, mountain and hill, crooked things, rough ways,* and *all flesh.* Emphasis also falls on the last word of each passage: *filled, brought low, made straight, made smooth*, and *God*. Ending the passage with the word *God* places even more emphasis on deity. (Note that the words *which was* in brackets are my inference.)
The US Declaration of Independence also makes good use of passive voice:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable RightsâŚ
### Should All Technical Writing Be in Passive Voice?
Some instructors and some technical style guides recommend the use of passive voice for technical and scientific writing. While there is a place for eliminating the first person in technical writing, it is still possible to use active voice, and with few exceptions, active voice will improve technical writing. For example:
- Passive voice
Increased yield was indicated.
- Active voice
The experiments indicated increased yield.
- Passive voice
It was observedâŚ
- Active voice
The tests illustratedâŚ
### Videos
The following short video pokes fun at passive voice.
The following video is a lot of fun. Brady Sullivan shows how to kill the Passive Voice Monsterâor at least confine him to his proper place.
The following video by the Writing Center at Texas A\&M University briefly summarizes active and passive voice.
In the following three videos, English instructors Adam and Emma provide detailed discussions of active and passive voice.
***
***
### Conclusion
Most writing in business and education suffers from too much passive voice. Passive voice is not wrong, but you can make your writing stronger by using active voice as much as possible.
Spot passive voice by looking for a to be verb followed by a past participle and applying the âby the Passive Voice Monsterâ test.
### Call to Action
Adjust your settings on Microsoft Word to flag passive voice, or try an online grammar-checking tool. Check to see how you are doing. How often do you use passive voice? In some instances, could you replace passive voice with active voice?
### Further Reading
âEnglish passive voice,â Wikipedia, <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_passive_voice>
âPassive Voice: When to Use It and When to Avoid It,â University of Toronto, Tim Corson and Rebecca Smollett, University College Writing Centre, <https://advice.writing.utoronto.ca/revising/passive-voice/>
âPassive Voice,â EnglishClub.com, <https://www.englishclub.com/grammar/passive-voice.htm>
âPassive Voice,â University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Writing Center, <https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/passive-voice/>
âActive Versus,â Purdue University, Online Writing Lab (OWL), <https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/academic_writing/active_and_passive_voice/active_versus_passive_voice.html>
### Credits
William Tyndale, New Testament (1534 edition), Luke 3:5-6, modern spelling and punctuation. |
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