tense, aspect, voice & modality - voice

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VOICE VOICE ACTIVE and PASSIVE ACTIVE and PASSIVE

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Page 1: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

VOICEVOICEACTIVE and PASSIVEACTIVE and PASSIVE

Page 2: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Active and Passive Active and Passive VoiceVoice

• Most transitive verbs can occur in two voices: active voice and passive voice.

Page 3: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Active VoiceActive Voice

• It is the most common, unmarked voice.

ActiveActive

VoiceVoice

Subject Verb Object

>

The lumberjack cut the tree.

Page 4: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Passive VoicePassive Voice

• Passive verb phrases are less common and used for special discourse functions.

PassivePassive

VoiceVoice

Subject Verb Object

>

The tree is cut by the lumberjack.

Page 5: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Now, compare:Now, compare:

• The lumberjack cut the tree.

• The tree is cut by the lumberjack.

Page 6: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

The passive is possible with The passive is possible with most transitive verbs:most transitive verbs:

• Everyone drinks water.

• John brought the black cat.

• Marylin mailed the letter.

• The scientists rescued the sea turtles.

• Thousands of teenagers read Harry Potter.

Page 7: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Short passives vs. Long passivesShort passives vs. Long passives

• Short passives The agent is not specified. (agentless passive)

“From my infancy I was noted for the docility and humanity of my disposition.” (The Black Cat, Edgar Allan Poe).

“Those that are found are called meteorites.” (www.infoplease.com)

Page 8: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Short passives vs. Long passivesShort passives vs. Long passives

• Long Passives contain a by-phrase The agent of the action is specified.

“Many accidents are caused by dangerous driving.”(MURPHY, Raymond. English Grammar in Use)

“This house was built by my grandfather.”(MURPHY, Raymond. English Grammar in Use)

Page 9: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Short Passives across registersShort Passives across registers

• Most common in academic prose:

“Following this methodology, three strains were selected, with which three sparkling wines were produced by the Champenoise method. Industrial sparkling wines were

also produced with the commercial strain EC-1118, used as a control in this study, and with strain J, from the

collection of the winery where the sparkling wines were prepared. The wines thus obtained were aged for 12 months in presence of the yeast. The findings of the

sensory analysis indicated that all of the sparkling wines were good quality.”

(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0740002000903903)

Page 10: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Short Passives across registersShort Passives across registers

• Also common in news:

Page 11: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice
Page 12: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Short Passives across registersShort Passives across registers

• Passives are rare in conversation. However, there are some that are more common in conversation than in the written registers:

“I can’t be bothered with my cosplay today, too tired.” “It’s gotta be done.”

“She’s a lady and ladies shouldn’t be messed with.”

Page 13: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Long Passive across registersLong Passive across registers

• In principle, the long passive can be replaced by an active clause with the same meaning.

• Passive:“In principle, the long passive can be replaced by an active clause with

the same meaning.”

• Active:“In principle, an active clause with the same meaning can replace the

passive.”

Page 14: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Long Passive across registersLong Passive across registers

However, this active clause would have been less appropriate then

the passive clause, because there are three motivations for choosing

the long passive.

Page 15: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Long Passive across registersLong Passive across registers

• Principle 1: The long passive is chosen to accord with the information-flow principle: the preference for presenting new information at the end of a clause. This means that given information is placed before new information.

Page 16: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Long Passive across registersLong Passive across registers

• Principle 2: The long passive is chosen to accord with the end-weight principle. This means the “heavier” (or more lengthy) element of the clause, in this case the agent, is placed at the end, where it does not hold up the processing of the rest of the clause.

Page 17: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Long Passive across registersLong Passive across registers

• Principle 3: The long passive is chosen to place initial emphasis on an element of the clause which is the topic, or the theme, of the current discourse.

Page 18: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Verbs that are common in the Verbs that are common in the passive voicepassive voice

• 90% of the time in the passive voice:

Aligned (with), based (on), born, coupled (with), deemed, effected, entitled (to), flattened, inclined, obliged, positioned, situated, stained, subjected (to)

Page 19: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Verbs that are common in the Verbs that are common in the passive voicepassive voice

• 70% of the time in the passive voice:

Approved, associated (with), attributed (to), classified (as), composed (of), confined (to), designed, diagnosed (as), distributed, estimated, grouped (with), intended, labelled, linked (to/with), located (at/in), plotted, recruited, stored, viewed.

Page 20: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Verbs that almost always occur Verbs that almost always occur in the passivein the passive

• Verbs that almost always occur in the passive:

Be born:

Susan was born in Chicago.

Be reputed:

The deal is reputed to be worth $1m.

Page 21: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Verbs that almost always occur Verbs that almost always occur in the passivein the passive

• Verbs like be based on, be deemed, be positioned, and be subjected to, are grammatical in both the active and passive voice, but they are used 90% of the time in the passive voice

“The material was deemed faulty.”

“Anyone found guilty of drinking alcohol may be subjected to 80 lashes of a cane.”

Page 22: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Get-PassiveGet-Passive

It’s rare in all registers, but is occasionally used in conversation.

Page 23: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Get-PassiveGet-Passive

• Only 5 verbs have notable frequency in this case:

Get married Get left

Get hit Get stuck

Get involved

Page 24: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Get-PassiveGet-Passive

• Many of these verbs have a different emphasis when used with be-passive:

I was married for a couple of years. (state)

She got married when she was eighteen. (process of getting into a state)

Page 25: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Uncommon verbs in the Uncommon verbs in the passivepassive..

• There are many verbs that rarely occur in the passive voice:

- Single Word Transitive Verbs: agree, exclaim, guess, hate, have, joke, try, etc..

- Single-object prepositional verbs: agree to/with, belong to, bet on, etc...

Page 26: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Uncommon verbs in the Uncommon verbs in the passivepassive..

• As we could see, many single-object prepositional verbs rarely occur in the passive voice.

They’re all waiting for me.

Page 27: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Uncommon verbs in the Uncommon verbs in the passive.passive.

• The passive voice is awkward, if not impossible, with these verbs, because there would be a stranded preposition after the verb.

* I’m being waited for by them.

Page 28: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Uncommon verbs in the Uncommon verbs in the passive.passive.

• However, a few single-object prepositional verbs do easily occur in the passive voice. The subject correspond to the prepositional object of the active version.

- Active: You can rely on your sister to remember when your birthday is.

- Passive: Your sister com be relied on to remember when your birthday is.

Page 29: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Uncommon verbs in the Uncommon verbs in the passive.passive.

• In contrast, two-object prepositional verbs usually allow (normally occur in) the passive voice. The subject is the direct object of the active form.

The style have been based on this assumption.

(active: Someone based the style on this assumption).

Page 30: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Voice and aspect Voice and aspect combinationscombinations

•Passive can combine with perfect and/or progressive aspect. •In actual use the perfect passive is moderately common.•The progressive passive is rare.•The perfect passive with present tense is preferred in academic prose and news.•The past perfect passive is moderately common in fiction.

Page 31: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

Voice and aspect Voice and aspect combinationscombinations

• Perfect passive verb phrases with present tense typically retain the meaning of both the perfect and the passive. They show past time with present relevance (perfect aspect) and they reduce the importance of the agent (passive voice):

• “He has been jailed for explosives offenses in Ulster and has previously been denied a visa.” (Grammar)

Page 32: Tense, Aspect, Voice & Modality - Voice

• Perfect passives in the past tense are moderately common in fiction:

“Most of the lights had been turned off.”

• The passive with progressive aspect is rare, but occurs occasionally in news and academy writing:

• “A police spokesman said nobody else was being sought in connection with the incident.” (grammar)

Voice and aspect Voice and aspect combinationscombinations