What Patricia said.
I have been warned by the police.
The police have warned me.
2007-12-09 09:05:29
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answer #1
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answered by Goddess of Grammar 7
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the difficulty could be regardless of is taking the action. subsequently, the international places are those doing the labeling (the action), so as that they may be the difficulty. i don't agree that passive voice is often undesirable. sometimes it facilitates written paintings make experience. Your sentence replaced into advantageous for a reader. The qualifiers make the belief look vulnerable ("maximum", "some", "might"). yet it somewhat is in basic terms me. present day cultures evaluate an abused spouse leaving her husband to be harmless; bobbing up international places see her movements as taboo.
2016-10-02 07:51:25
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Any passive phrase needs a subject+be+past participle.
You can't make this phrase passive, because there is no main verb, just two auxiliaries. It needs a main verb to make any sense. So if you have an active phrase 'Someone attacked me' you could make this passive by saying 'I was attacked' or 'I have been attacked', where 'attack' is the main verb..
2007-12-09 10:08:30
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answer #3
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answered by vilgessuola 6
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You're missing information.
If the active is something like:
"they have given me...."
then I have been given would be the correct passive.
2007-12-09 08:53:19
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answer #4
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answered by Patricia B 3
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"I have been" is active, of course it is past active but still active voice.
What has been me is the passive form.
2007-12-09 09:04:26
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answer #5
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answered by Form F 4
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I am.
I think that's what your looking for...
2007-12-09 08:53:12
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answer #6
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answered by Trix 4
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