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Passiiv

Passiiv, or passive voice, is a grammatical voice in which the subject of a sentence is the recipient or undergoer of the action rather than the doer. In a passive construction, the event is presented from the viewpoint of what happens to the subject, while the agent performing the action may be omitted or expressed separately, often with a by-phrase.

In English, the passive is typically formed with a form of the auxiliary verb be plus the

Passives serve several functions. They can foreground the action or its result, de-emphasize the agent, or present

Typologically, passives are related to other voice phenomena such as antipassives (which reduce the prominence of

See also: Active voice, Voice (linguistics).

past
participle
of
the
main
verb,
as
in
“The
ball
was
thrown
by
John.”
Many
languages
use
different
mechanisms
to
mark
the
passive.
Some
rely
on
dedicated
verb
forms
or
inflection,
others
use
auxiliary
verbs,
and
some
rely
on
syntactic
or
morphological
changes
to
mark
voice.
The
agent,
if
mentioned,
is
usually
introduced
by
a
preposition
or
case
marker.
information
in
an
impersonal
or
formal
style.
They
are
common
in
scientific,
formal,
and
news
writing
for
this
reason.
In
many
languages,
agents
may
be
omitted
when
unknown,
unimportant,
or
obvious
from
context.
the
agent)
and
mediopassives
(where
the
subject
participates
in
the
action
in
a
reflexive
or
middle
sense).
The
exact
form
and
frequency
of
passives
vary
widely
across
languages,
but
the
basic
idea—shifting
focus
from
the
agent
to
the
action
or
patient—is
widespread.