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3. Active Tenses and Their Passive Equivalents

Tense/Verb form Active voice Passive voice

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Simple present keeps is kept

Present continuous is keeping is being kept

Simple past kept was kept

Past continuous was keeping was being kept

Present perfect has kept has been kept

Past perfect had kept had been kept

Future will keep will be kept

Conditional would keep would be kept

Perfect conditional would have kept would have been kept

Present infinitive to keep to be kept

Perfect infinitive to have kept to have been kept

Present participle/Gerund keeping being kept

Perfect participle having kept having been kept

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4. Get in the Passive

In colloquial speech get is sometimes used instead of be. We use get to emphasize action or change. We often use it for something happening by accident, unexpectedly or in an unplanned way:

The eggs got (=were) broken.

How did the painting get damaged?

But not The picture got painted several years ago.

We also use get in idiomatic expressions, e.g. get washed (=wash oneself), get dressed/changed, get engaged/married/divorced, get started (=start)

5. Questions in the passive

Questions about the identity of the subject of an active verb are usually expressed by an affirmative:

The traffic delayed me. What delayed you?

Our team won. Which team won?

Questions about the subject of a passive verb are also expressed by an affirmative:

Something was done. What was done?

One of the houses was sold. Which of them was sold?

Interrogative verbs in active questions about the object become affirmative verbs in passive questions:

Active What did they steal? (interrogative verb)

Passive What was stolen? (affirmative verb)

Conversely, affirmative verbs in active questions become interrogative verbs in passive questions:

Active Who wrote it? (affirmative verb)

Passive Who was it written by? (interrogative verb)

Other types of question require interrogative verbs in both active and passive:

Active When/Where/Why did he paint it?

Passive When/Where/Why was it painted?