The Passive Voice is Both Common and Perfectly Okay

I was thinking about writing rules and fake rules and so on from the previous post.


I thought I would take a moment to emphasize, NOT ONLY is “was” not always (or even usually) part of a passive construction, but also the passive voice IS ALLOWED. It’s actually both rather common and quite useful; sometimes even crucial. Allow me to provide a handful of examples.


Some of these, the astute reader will notice, do not actually use “was,” so if that’s your shorthand method of identifying the passive voice, back up and start looking at actor versus acted-upon. And if, God forbid, “was” is your teacher’s method of identifying the passive voice, you can undoubtedly slip in all kinds of passive constructions that he or she won’t even notice. If that’s the kind of thing that amuses you, I mean.


So:


1. The ax murderer was apprehended after a brief high-speed chase.


The essential information here is that the bad guy has been apprehended. We can assume that he was apprehended by the police, but the agent of his capture is not as important as the fact of his capture.


2. This house was built in the late 1800s.


Not only is the builder not important, most likely the builder is not known. How in the world would you re-cast this into the active voice? And why would you bother? It sounds fine with a passive construction. If you put “My house was built in the late 1800s” in an English paper, I bet the teacher wouldn’t notice the sentence uses the passive — even if she had just completed a lecture about the evils of the passive voice two days earlier, and even if she lectured about the evils of the word “was.”


3. My camera has been stolen!


You definitely don’t know the name of the burglar. “Someone stole my camera!” would work, but offers no improvement.


4. My dog was hit by a car, but he’s okay.


You are very unlikely to be more interested in the person who hit your dog, even if you know who it was, than in your dog’s wellbeing. “A car hit my dog” would sound silly. The passive voice puts the emphasis in the only reasonable place — on your dog — where it stays throughout even though this sentence shifts from passive to active halfway through.


Okay, let’s write a few more … here goes:


5. Manhattan has been destroyed by aliens!


6. My dogs are all thoroughly spoiled.


7. I was born in Houma, Louisiana.


8. They were a trifle anxious when the moaning began.


9. He was surrounded by lurching hordes of zombies.


10. Your meaning was most elegantly conveyed by a few well-chosen phrases, even though you chose to use the passive voice.


To sum up, basically you can just file Passive Voice under “Stuff I never think about; I just write sentences that work.” If I were writing an English paper, though, I might entertain myself by making sure lots of passive constructions appeared in it because that is indeed the sort of thing that amuses me.


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Published on November 22, 2016 12:39
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