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Dave1985 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Difference between "They are transformed" Vs "They Transformed"

Difference between "They are transformed" Vs "They Transformed"

  

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dave1985 Difference between "They are transformed" Vs "They Transformed" They are passive and active forms, respectively, of the same idea. In simple terms, active and passive are opposites in terms of who does the action and what receives the action. Somebody acts on something in either case, but it's expressed differently.

  • dave1985 Difference between "They are transformed" Vs "They Transformed" They are passive and active forms, respectively, of the same idea.
  • In simple terms, active and passive are opposites in terms of who does the action and what receives the action.
  • Somebody acts on something in either case, but it's expressed differently.
  • You can put the person who acts first in the sentence (active), or you can put the thing that the person acts on first in the sentence (passive).
  • Person who acts first: Steven threw the ball.
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1 Answers
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dave1985

Difference between "They are transformed" Vs "They Transformed"

They are passive and active forms, respectively, of the same idea.


In simple terms, active and passive are opposites in terms of who does the action and what receives the action.

Somebody acts on something in either case, but it's expressed differently. You can

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