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user230
user230

There are two types of passive clause:

  1. Short passive

    The money was stolen.

  2. Long passive

    The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.

Most passives are short. They don't contain by-phrases.


Only long passives have corresponding active clauses:

  1. Short passive

    Passive: The money was stolen.
    Active: *Stole the money.

    The active clause is ungrammatical. It needs a subject, andbut it doesn't have one.

  2. Long passive

    Passive: The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.
    Active: A short man wearing six jackets stole the money.

    This active clause is fine. It needs a subject, and it has one.

Your example is a short passive, so it has no direct active clause equivalent. If you want to make it into an active clause, you'll need to add a by-phrase, turning it into a long passive.

You'll have to rely on context to figure out what by-phrase works in your clause, if any.


In this answer, the * symbol marks a sentence as ungrammatical. For more information about passives, see A Student's Introduction to English Grammar (2005), chapter 15.

There are two types of passive clause:

  1. Short passive

    The money was stolen.

  2. Long passive

    The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.

Most passives are short. They don't contain by-phrases.


Only long passives have corresponding active clauses:

  1. Short passive

    Passive: The money was stolen.
    Active: *Stole the money.

    The active clause is ungrammatical. It needs a subject, and it doesn't have one.

  2. Long passive

    Passive: The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.
    Active: A short man wearing six jackets stole the money.

    This active clause is fine. It needs a subject, and it has one.

Your example is a short passive, so it has no direct active clause equivalent. If you want to make it into an active clause, you'll need to add a by-phrase, turning it into a long passive.

You'll have to rely on context to figure out what by-phrase works in your clause, if any.


In this answer, the * symbol marks a sentence as ungrammatical. For more information about passives, see A Student's Introduction to English Grammar (2005), chapter 15.

There are two types of passive clause:

  1. Short passive

    The money was stolen.

  2. Long passive

    The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.

Most passives are short. They don't contain by-phrases.


Only long passives have corresponding active clauses:

  1. Short passive

    Passive: The money was stolen.
    Active: *Stole the money.

    The active clause is ungrammatical. It needs a subject, but it doesn't have one.

  2. Long passive

    Passive: The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.
    Active: A short man wearing six jackets stole the money.

    This active clause is fine. It needs a subject, and it has one.

Your example is a short passive, so it has no direct active clause equivalent. If you want to make it into an active clause, you'll need to add a by-phrase, turning it into a long passive.

You'll have to rely on context to figure out what by-phrase works in your clause, if any.


In this answer, the * symbol marks a sentence as ungrammatical. For more information about passives, see A Student's Introduction to English Grammar (2005), chapter 15.

Source Link
user230
user230

There are two types of passive clause:

  1. Short passive

    The money was stolen.

  2. Long passive

    The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.

Most passives are short. They don't contain by-phrases.


Only long passives have corresponding active clauses:

  1. Short passive

    Passive: The money was stolen.
    Active: *Stole the money.

    The active clause is ungrammatical. It needs a subject, and it doesn't have one.

  2. Long passive

    Passive: The money was stolen by a short man wearing six jackets.
    Active: A short man wearing six jackets stole the money.

    This active clause is fine. It needs a subject, and it has one.

Your example is a short passive, so it has no direct active clause equivalent. If you want to make it into an active clause, you'll need to add a by-phrase, turning it into a long passive.

You'll have to rely on context to figure out what by-phrase works in your clause, if any.


In this answer, the * symbol marks a sentence as ungrammatical. For more information about passives, see A Student's Introduction to English Grammar (2005), chapter 15.