Active Versus Passive Verbs | Write With Clearer Action

Active verbs name the doer up front; passive verbs put the receiver first and lean on a form of “be.”

If you’ve reread a sentence and thought, “Why does this feel sluggish?”, voice is a common reason. Voice is the grammar choice that decides where the doer shows up and how direct the action feels.

You’ll learn a fast way to spot active and passive verbs, pick the right one for the job, and rewrite without changing meaning. These moves work in essays, emails, reports, and stories.

What Active And Passive Verbs Mean

In an active sentence, the subject does the action.

  • Active: The tutor explained the rule.

In a passive sentence, the receiver of the action sits in the subject spot. The doer may appear later in a “by” phrase, or it may vanish.

  • Passive with a doer: The rule was explained by the tutor.
  • Passive without a doer: The rule was explained.

Passive voice usually uses a form of be (is/are/was/were/been/being) plus a past participle (explained, written, tested).

Active Versus Passive Verbs In Real Sentences

Read each pair once, then ask one question: “Who is doing the action?”

Pair One: Direct Action

  • Active: Maria solved the equation.
  • Passive: The equation was solved by Maria.

Both lines share the same fact. The active line starts with the person doing the work, so it reads brisk.

Pair Two: The Doer Is Unknown

  • Active: Someone stole my notes.
  • Passive: My notes were stolen.

When you truly don’t know the doer, passive voice avoids a fuzzy subject like “someone.”

How To Spot Passive Voice Fast

Many learners hunt for the word “by.” That helps sometimes, yet it misses agentless passives like “The window was broken.” Use this quick test instead.

Step 1: Find The Main Verb Group

Circle the helping verb plus the main verb. In “The essay was graded,” the verb group is “was graded.”

Step 2: Check For “Be” + Past Participle

Passive voice loves be + past participle: is written, was chosen, were recorded, has been revised, is being reviewed.

Step 3: Ask “Can I Add ‘By Someone’?”

If “by someone” fits cleanly after the verb group, you likely have a passive construction.

  • The policy was changed (by someone). → passive
  • The students laughed (by someone). → not passive

Common False Alarms

Not every “be” verb is passive. Sometimes “be” links the subject to a description.

  • Linking: The rule is clear.
  • Passive: The rule is explained in the handout.

When Active Voice Wins

Active voice shines when you want clear responsibility, quick reading, and strong verbs.

Responsibility Shows Up On The Page

Active voice makes it easy to name who did what.

  • Active: I tested three sources and compared their claims.
  • Passive: Three sources were tested and their claims were compared.

Sentences Tend To Shrink

Passive voice adds helper verbs. Those words can be useful, yet they can also bloat a paragraph. If you’re trimming an essay, switching to active voice is a clean edit.

Verbs Get Sharper

Active voice pairs well with precise verbs like argued, measured, revised, proved, mapped.

When Passive Voice Fits Better

Passive voice is not “wrong.” Writers use it when the receiver needs attention first, or when the doer is unknown, obvious, or better left unsaid.

Process Writing And Lab Steps

Procedures can read smoother in passive voice because the actor stays the same across many steps.

  • The solution was heated to 80°C, then it was cooled.

Polite Tone In Messages

In customer service or workplace writing, passive voice can soften blame.

  • Active: You entered the wrong code.
  • Passive: The wrong code was entered.

Why Voice Changes Reader Effort

Voice isn’t a grammar trivia point. It changes how fast a reader can build a mental picture of the sentence. Active voice gives the reader the actor first, then the action, then the receiver. That order matches how many people process events.

Active Voice Makes Cause And Effect Obvious

When the actor comes first, the reader doesn’t need to pause and hunt for who did it. In school writing, that helps your claims sound firm. In workplace writing, that helps tasks land with less back-and-forth.

Passive Voice Can Hide The Actor

Agentless passive sentences can be useful when the actor is unknown. They can also create fog when the actor matters. Watch for lines like “Mistakes were made” or “The deadline was missed.” If your reader needs accountability, name the actor and use active voice.

Word Count And Rhythm Shift

Passive voice adds helper verbs, and those extra words change rhythm. A few passives in a paragraph can be fine. A long chain of passives can feel heavy. If your paragraph drags, check the verb groups first.

Passive Voice Variations You’ll See In Real Writing

Textbooks teach “be + past participle,” yet real writing includes a few close cousins.

Get Passive

English also uses “get” in passive-like structures: He got promoted, The door got locked. These can sound casual. In formal writing, “was promoted” or an active rewrite may fit better.

Hidden Passives With Long Verb Groups

Watch for strings like has been being or will have been. They’re not wrong, yet they can be hard to read. If the actor is known, an active rewrite can clean it up.

Purdue OWL’s handout on Active and Passive Voice gives more samples and a clear rewrite method.

Table Of Voice Choices By Writing Task

Start with your goal, then match it to a voice pattern.

Writing Task Voice That Fits Reason To Choose It
Essay thesis and claims Active Shows ownership and direct action
Step-by-step instructions Active Makes commands easy to follow
Lab procedure notes Passive or mixed Keeps attention on the process and materials
News headline Active Reads fast and names the actor
Incident report with unknown actor Passive Avoids guessing who did it
Customer service reply Passive or mixed Reduces blame while stating what happened
Resume bullet Active Shows what you achieved with strong verbs
Policy statement Passive Keeps attention on the rule, not the rule-maker
Research methods line Active Clarifies who ran each step

How To Change Passive To Active Without Breaking Meaning

Follow this pattern sentence by sentence.

Step 1: Find The Actor

Look for a “by” phrase. If you see one, you’ve got the actor.

  • The mural was painted by the class.

If there’s no “by” phrase, pull the actor from context. If the actor is unknown, keeping the sentence passive may be the honest choice.

Step 2: Put The Actor First

Move the actor into the subject spot, then keep the rest of the meaning.

  • The class painted the mural.

Step 3: Match Tense And Details

“Was painted” maps to simple past “painted.” “Has been studied” maps to present perfect “has studied.” Keep time words, numbers, and places the same.

Mini Rewrites

  • The decision was made by the committee.The committee made the decision.
  • The files have been deleted.The system deleted the files. (Only if that’s true)
  • The tickets were sold in minutes.The venue sold the tickets in minutes. (Only if the seller is known)

How To Change Active To Passive On Purpose

Use passive voice when you want the receiver in the first position.

Step 1: Move The Object Into The Subject Spot

  • Active: The editor revised the draft.
  • Passive start: The draft…

Step 2: Add The Right Form Of “Be”

Match the tense: revised becomes was revised; will revise becomes will be revised; is revising becomes is being revised.

Step 3: Keep Or Drop The “By” Phrase

  • The draft was revised by the editor.
  • The draft was revised.

Passive Voice Forms That Trip People Up

Passive voice shows up in many tenses, not just “was + verb.” Learn the patterns and you’ll spot them fast.

Perfect Tenses

  • The seats have been reserved.
  • The seats had been reserved before noon.

Continuous Forms

  • The report is being edited.
  • The report was being edited when the email arrived.

Modal Verbs

  • The form must be signed.
  • The device can be returned.

Cambridge Dictionary’s grammar page on passive voice is handy when you want to confirm forms like “must be done” or “is being written.”

Table Of Rewrite Patterns You Can Reuse

Pick the pattern that matches your sentence, then swap in your own words.

Pattern Passive Version Active Version
Simple past The quiz was graded (by Ms. Lee). Ms. Lee graded the quiz.
Present simple The door is locked (by staff). Staff lock the door.
Future The email will be sent (by the team). The team will send the email.
Present perfect The slides have been updated. The designer has updated the slides.
Modal The form must be signed. You must sign the form.
Continuous The files are being uploaded. The app is uploading the files.
Two objects A prize was given to each student. The coach gave each student a prize.

Editing Checklist For Clean Voice

You don’t need to remove every passive verb. Aim for clarity and honest meaning.

  1. Underline sentences that feel vague or slow.
  2. Mark every “be” verb, then flag the true passives.
  3. For each passive sentence, ask: “Does the reader need the actor?”
  4. If yes, rewrite in active voice and name the actor.
  5. If no, keep the passive voice, then trim nearby clutter.
  6. Read the paragraph aloud. If it’s clear on one read, stop editing.

Practice Set: Fix The Voice, Keep The Meaning

Write your own rewrite, then compare to the sample. Aim for clear meaning, not fancy wording.

Sentence 1

The results were reviewed, and a decision was made.

Sample rewrite: The panel reviewed the results and made a decision.

Sentence 2

Your request has been received and will be processed.

Sample rewrite: We received your request and will process it.

A Simple Rule For Confident Choices

If the reader needs to know who did it, write active voice. If the reader needs the result or the actor is unknown, passive voice can fit.

Keep your voice choice steady within a paragraph. Sudden switches can feel jumpy unless you have a clear reason.

References & Sources