Everything about Active Voice totally explained
In
grammar, the
voice (also called gender or diathesis) of a verb describes the relationship between the action (or state) that the verb expresses and the participants identified by its
arguments (subject, object, etc.).When the
subject is the agent or actor of the verb, the verb is in the
active voice. When the subject is the patient, target or undergoer of the action, it's said to be in the
passive voice.
For example, in the sentence:
» The cat ate the mouse
the verb "ate" is in the active voice, but in the sentence:
» The mouse was eaten by the cat
the verbal phrase "was eaten" is passive.
In a
transformation from an active-voice
clause to an equivalent passive-voice construction, the subject and the
direct object switch grammatical roles. The direct object gets
promoted to subject, and the subject
demoted to an (optional)
complement. In the examples above,
the mouse serves as the direct object in the active-voice version, but becomes the subject in the passive version. The subject of the active-voice version,
the cat, becomes part of a prepositional phrase in the passive version of the sentence, and could be left out entirely.
The passive voice in English
The
English language uses a
periphrastic passive voice; that is, it isn't a single word form, but rather a construction making use of other word forms. Specifically, it's made up of a form of the auxiliary verb
to be and a past
participle of the main verb. In other languages, such as
Latin, the passive voice is simply marked on the verb by
inflection:
poemam legit "He reads the poem";
poema legitur "The poem is read".
The middle voice
Some languages (such as
Sanskrit,
Icelandic and Classical
Greek) have a
middle voice. The middle voice is in the middle of the active and the passive voice because the subject can't be categorized as either agent or patient but has elements of both. An intransitive verb that appears active but expresses a passive action characterizes the English middle voice. For example, in
The casserole cooked in the oven,
cooked appears
syntactically active but
semantically passive, putting it in the middle voice. In Classical
Greek, the middle voice is often reflexive, denoting that the subject acts on or for itself, such as "The boy washes himself", or "The boy washes." It can be transitive or intransitive. It can occasionally be used in a causative sense, such as "The father causes his son to be set free", or "The father ransoms his son."
Many
deponent verbs in
Latin represent survivals of the
Proto-Indo-European middle voice; many of these in turn survive as obligatory pseudo-
reflexive verbs in the
Romance languages such as
French and
Spanish.
Other grammatical voices
Some languages have even more grammatical voices. For example, Classic
Mongolian features five voices: active, passive, causative, reciprocal and cooperative.
The
antipassive voice deletes or demotes the object of transitive verbs, and promotes the actor to an intransitive subject. This voice is very common among
ergative languages (which may feature passive voices as well), but rare among
nominative-accusative languages.
There are also phenomena that look at first glance like they change the
valence of a verb, but in fact do not. So called
hierarchical or
inversion languages are of this sort. Their agreement system will be sensitive to an external person or animacy hierarchy (or a combination of both): 1 > 2 > 3 or Anim > Inan and so forth. E.g., in
Meskwaki (an Algonquian language), verbs inflect for both subject and object, but agreement markers don't have inherent values for these. Rather, a third marker, the direct or inverse marker, indicates the proper interpretation:
ne-wa:pam-e:-w-a [1-look.at-DIR-3-3Sg] "I am looking at him", but
ne-wa:pam-ekw-w-a [1-look.at-INV-3-3Sg] "He is looking at me". Some scholars (notably Rhodes) have analyzed this as a kind of obligatory passivization dependent on animacy, while others have claimed it isn't a voice at all, but rather see inversion as yet another kind of alignment type, parallel to
nominative/accusative,
ergative/absolutive,
split-S, and
fluid-S alignments.
The passive voice in topic-prominent languages
Topic-prominent languages like
Mandarin tend not to employ the passive voice as frequently. Mandarin-speakers construct the passive voice by prefixing the active noun phrase with
bei- and rearranging the usual word order. For example, this sentence using active voice:
Note: the first line is in Traditional Chinese while the second is Simplified Chinese.
»
The fourth person in Baltic-Finnic languages
Some languages don't contrast voices, but similar-looking persons. For example,
Baltic-Finnic languages such as
Finnish and
Estonian have a "passive", which conceptually postulates a never-mentioned "fourth person" (called "passive" or "common person" in Finnish) rather than varying subjectivity or objectivity. For example, translating the sentence "The house was blown down" as
Talo puhallettiin maahan would give the idea that some unmentioned person is blowing the house down by the force of his breath. Also,
transitivity may be used, such that the fourth-person
Ongelma ratkaistiin, which uses the transitive, means "Someone solved the problem", while the fourth-person
Ongelma ratkesi uses the
anticausative, and means "The problem was solved".
Celtic languages also possess a person/number inflection called "fourth person", which has been associated with a passive interpretation, though most modern celtic linguage students argue against this. In Gaeilge (simplified modern Irish), the fourth person is called "autonomous", because of the form of the verb conjugation, which is 'autonomous' of a subject. This is usually translated into English as the nebulous "they", "one", or the impersonal "you". For example, the common sign interdicting tobacco consumption:
Ná Cáitear Tabac
Ná cáith-tear tabac
DON'T consume-4thPERS tobacco.
The difference between this 4th person and a true passive, is that to the speaker, the 4th person, or "impersonal" indicates that there's in fact no agent, whereas the passive indicates the demotion of an agent. In English, the formation of the passive allows the optional inclusion of an agent in a prepositional phrase, 'by the man', et c. Where English would leave out the noun phrase, Irish uses the autonomous, where English includes the noun phrase, Irish uses the passive.
Dynamic and static passive
Some languages draw a distinction between static (or stative) passive voice, and dynamic (or eventive) passive voice. Examples include
German,
Spanish or
Italian. "Static" means that an action was done to the subject at a certain point in time resulting in a state in the time focussed upon, whereas "dynamic" means that an action takes place.
In German
Static passive auxiliary verb:
sein
Dynamic passive auxiliary verb: werden
Ich bin am 20. August geboren ("I was born on August 20", static)
Ich wurde am 20. August geboren ("I became born on August 20", dynamic)
In Spanish
Spanish has three verbs corresponding to English
be:
ser,
estar and
haber. Two types of passive voice are formed by them.
Ser is used to form the ordinary (dynamic) passive voice:
» La puerta es abierta. "The door is opened [bysomeone]."
La puerta es cerrada. "The door is closed [bysomeone]."
(Note that this construction is very unidiomatic in this case. The usual phrasing would be
La puerta se cierra.)
Estar is used to form the static passive voice (not regarded as a passive voice in traditional
Spanish grammar):
» La puerta está abierta. "The door is open," for example it has been opened.
La puerta está cerrada. "The door is closed," for example it has been closed.
In both cases, the verb's participle is used as the complement (as is sometimes the case in English). The verb
haber doesn't form any type of passive voice.
In Italian
Italian uses two verbs (
essere and
venire) to traslate the static and the dynamic passive:
Dynamic passive auxiliary verb:
essere and
venire (
to be and
to come)
» La porta è aperta. or
La porta viene aperta. "The door is opened [bysomeone]" or "The door
comes open [bysomeone]".
La porta è chiusa. or
La porta viene chiusa. "The door is closed [bysomeone]" or "The door
comes closed [bysomeone]".
Static passive auxiliary verb:
essere (to be)
» La porta è aperta. "The door is open," for example it has been opened.
La porta è chiusa. "The door is closed," for example it has been closed.
List of voices
Voices found in various languages include:
Active voice
Passive voice
Middle voice
Mediopassive voice
Impersonal passive voice
Antipassive voice
Reflexive voice (the subject and the object of the verb are the same, as in I cut myself)
Reciprocal voice (subject and object perform the verbal action to each other, e. g. I cut her and she cut me)
Causative voice
Adjutative voice
Applicative voice
Circumstantial voiceFurther Information
Get more info on 'Active Voice'.
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