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A. Is fly was caught by me?
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B. Was the fly caught by you?
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C. Was the fly caught?
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D. None of these
Explanation
Active voice: "Did you catch the fly?" (past simple, interrogative)
Passive voice: Start with "Was" (since "fly" is singular and past tense is used)
"catch" → "caught" (past participle)
Subject "you" comes after "by"
Correct passive voice:
Was the fly caught by you?
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A. None of these
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B. Let him not be paid anything.
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C. Let him not will be paid anything.
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D. Let don’t pay anything to him.
Explanation
Negative imperative sentence → passive voice starts with "Let... not be + past participle"
"Do not pay" → "Let... not be paid"
Object "him" becomes the subject in passive.
Correct passive voice:
Let him not be paid anything.
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A. None of these
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B. Let his name struck.
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C. Let his name be struck off.
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D. His name will be sticking off.
Explanation
Imperative sentence → passive voice starts with "Let"
Base verb "strike off" → past participle is "struck off"
Structure: Let + object + be + past participle
Correct passive voice:
Let his name be struck off.
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A. Ticket will be buy by his for himself.
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B. A ticket will be bought by him for himself.
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C. None of these
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D. Ticket would be bought by him for herself.
Explanation
Tense: Future simple (will buy)
Passive structure: will be + past participle
"buy" → bought (past participle)
Subject "he" → him
Reflexive pronoun remains: for himself
Correct passive voice:
A ticket will be bought by him for himself.
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A. Beautiful flowers are bought by them.
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B. None of these
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C. Beautiful flowers is bought by them.
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D. Beautiful flowers are buyed by them.
Explanation
Tense: Present simple (They buy)
Passive structure: Object + is/are + past participle + by + subject
"Flowers" is plural → use "are"
Past participle of buy is bought
Correct passive voice:
Beautiful flowers are bought by them.
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A. Why were they discouraged by you?
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B. Why they have been discouraged by you?
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C. None of these
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D. Why they are being discouraged by you?
Explanation
The sentence is in past simple tense (did discourage) — passive form becomes was/were + past participle.
So, correct passive structure: "Why were they discouraged by you?"
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A. None of these
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B. They had bribed the officer.
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C. They were bribing the officer.
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D. They have bribed the officer.
Explanation
The given sentence is in past perfect passive voice: "had been bribed."
Active voice of past perfect: Subject + had + past participle, hence "They had bribed the officer."
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A. Why had the mirror been broken by you?
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B. None of these
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C. Why the mirror has been broken by you?
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D. Why has the mirror been broken by you?
Explanation
Why has the mirror been broken by you?
This is a present perfect interrogative sentence in passive voice.
Structure: Why + has/have + object + been + past participle + by subject.
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A. This box has never been touched by anybody.
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B. This box never ever been touched.
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C. This box was not touched by everybody.
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D. None of these
Explanation
Nobody has touched this box.
Passive voice: This box has never been touched by anybody.
"Nobody" becomes "by anybody" in passive.
Present perfect tense is maintained: has been touched.
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A. None of these
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B. Have you finished the job?
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C. Do you have finished the job?
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D. Has your job been finished by you?
Explanation
Correct Passive Voice Conversion:
The original sentence ("Have you finished your job?") is in the active voice (Present Perfect Tense).
Its passive form follows the structure: "Has/Have + subject + been + past participle + by + agent?"
Thus, it becomes: "Has your job been finished by you?"
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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