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A. The project has been completed by them
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B. None of these
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C. The project is completed by them
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D. The project had been completed by them
Explanation
The sentence "They have completed the project" is in the active voice, and the passive form is "The project has been completed by them".
This maintains the same tense (present perfect) while changing the subject and object.
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A. By which were you taught English?
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B. By whom you were taught English?
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C. By who were you taught English?
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D. By whom was you taught English?
Explanation
- The correct passive voice of "Who taught you English?" is "By whom were you taught English?".
- In passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject.
- "Who" changes to "whom" to reflect the passive structure correctly.
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A. English is spoken all over the world.
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B. English was spoken all over the world.
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C. English is spoken by people.
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D. English was spoken by people.
Explanation
The correct transformation of "People speak English all over the world" into passive voice is "English is spoken all over the world."
This sentence correctly retains the present tense and the meaning of the original sentence.
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A. None of these
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B. The injured man bandaged his arm.
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C. The injured man made the doctor injure his arm.
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D. The arm of the injured man was bandaged by the doctor.
Explanation
The arm of the injured man was bandaged by the doctor.
This sentence is in the passive voice, which means the focus is on the action (bandaging) rather than the person performing the action (the doctor).
The original sentence, "The Doctor bandaged the arm of the injured man," is in the active voice.
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A. She is being motivated by her friends
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B. None of these
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C. Her friends are motivating her
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D. Her friends were being motivated by her
Explanation
The given sentence is in active voice (past continuous tense): She was motivating her friends.
In passive voice, the object (her friends) becomes the subject: Her friends were being motivated by her.
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A. None of these
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B. He asked if he had to do it
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C. He asked that he has to do it
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D. He asked that he had to do it
Explanation
In indirect speech, questions beginning with "Do" are converted into "if" clauses, and the tense is shifted back.
Here, "Do I have" becomes "if he had."
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A. That book has been finished by me
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B. That book will have been finished by me
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C. That book will be finished by me
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D. None of these
Explanation
In passive voice, the object ("that book") becomes the subject, and the verb tense is adjusted accordingly.
The sentence changes from "I will have finished that book" to "That book will have been finished by me."
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A. None of these
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B. No more could be contained in the box
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C. No more this box can contain
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D. No more can be contained in the box
Explanation
The passive voice of the sentence "The box can contain no more" is "No more can be contained in the box".
This sentence structure emphasizes the limitation of the box's capacity, rather than the box itself.
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A. Is my father known to you?
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B. Does my father known to you?
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C. Did you know my father?
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D. None of these
Explanation
Active voice emphasizes the doer (you), while passive voice emphasizes the receiver (my father).
The passive voice construction "Is my father known to you?" makes the focus on "my father" and whether they are known to you.
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A. "They have been laughed at by you."
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B. "You have been laughed at by them."
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C. "Why have you laughed at them?"
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D. "Have they been laughed at by you?"
Explanation
The passive voice of the sentence "Have you laughed at them?" is: Have they been laughed at by you?
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❌ Wrong: 0 |
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