Difference between revisions of "Voice (grammar)"

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(more on antipassive)
(link fix)
Line 3: Line 3:
 
The ''[[active voice]]'' indicates that the subject is acting (e.g., "I ate the sandwich").
 
The ''[[active voice]]'' indicates that the subject is acting (e.g., "I ate the sandwich").
  
The ''[[passive voice]]'' indicates that the subject is being acted on (e.g., "The sandwich was eaten").<ref>[http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_vmood.html Verbs: Voice and Mood]</ref>  Although it is often avoided for stylistic reasons, passive voice is not a grammatical error. In some types of [[writing]] passive voice is even preferred, as when the agent of an action is not wished to be specified (e.g. "mistakes were made"), but more often, writing is made more wordy, if not less clear, when the passive is used.<ref>http://www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb/handouts/passivevoice.html</ref>
+
The ''[[passive voice]]'' indicates that the subject is being acted on (e.g., "The sandwich was eaten").<ref>[http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_vmood.html Verbs: Voice and Mood]</ref>  Although it is often avoided for stylistic reasons, passive voice is not a grammatical error. In some types of [[writing]] passive voice is even preferred, as when the agent of an action is not wished to be specified (e.g. "mistakes were made"), but more often, writing is made more wordy, if not less clear, when the passive is used.<ref>http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/passive-voice</ref>
  
 
Some languages also have a ''[[middle voice]],'' which indicates that the subject acts on himself or for his own benefit or that the plural subjects act on one another.<ref>[http://www.sil.org/LINGUISTICS/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatIsMiddleVoice.htm What is middle voice?]</ref>  Yet another voice in some languages is the ''antipassive voice,'' in which the direct object of an otherwise transitive verb is not expressed (e.g., "I ate," without specifying what the speaker ate).<ref>[http://wals.info/chapter/108 Antipassive Constructions]</ref>  The antipassive voice is usually found in ergative languages and in accusative languages in which transitive verbs in the active voice agree with both subject and object.  In accusative languages in which verbs do not agree with their objects, an antipassive-like construction can typically be formed simply by not mentioning the object.
 
Some languages also have a ''[[middle voice]],'' which indicates that the subject acts on himself or for his own benefit or that the plural subjects act on one another.<ref>[http://www.sil.org/LINGUISTICS/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatIsMiddleVoice.htm What is middle voice?]</ref>  Yet another voice in some languages is the ''antipassive voice,'' in which the direct object of an otherwise transitive verb is not expressed (e.g., "I ate," without specifying what the speaker ate).<ref>[http://wals.info/chapter/108 Antipassive Constructions]</ref>  The antipassive voice is usually found in ergative languages and in accusative languages in which transitive verbs in the active voice agree with both subject and object.  In accusative languages in which verbs do not agree with their objects, an antipassive-like construction can typically be formed simply by not mentioning the object.

Revision as of 17:45, March 14, 2013

In grammar, voice refers to a form of a verb that indicates whether the subject of the verb is an actor, patient, or recipient.[1]

The active voice indicates that the subject is acting (e.g., "I ate the sandwich").

The passive voice indicates that the subject is being acted on (e.g., "The sandwich was eaten").[2] Although it is often avoided for stylistic reasons, passive voice is not a grammatical error. In some types of writing passive voice is even preferred, as when the agent of an action is not wished to be specified (e.g. "mistakes were made"), but more often, writing is made more wordy, if not less clear, when the passive is used.[3]

Some languages also have a middle voice, which indicates that the subject acts on himself or for his own benefit or that the plural subjects act on one another.[4] Yet another voice in some languages is the antipassive voice, in which the direct object of an otherwise transitive verb is not expressed (e.g., "I ate," without specifying what the speaker ate).[5] The antipassive voice is usually found in ergative languages and in accusative languages in which transitive verbs in the active voice agree with both subject and object. In accusative languages in which verbs do not agree with their objects, an antipassive-like construction can typically be formed simply by not mentioning the object.

References

  1. What is voice?
  2. Verbs: Voice and Mood
  3. http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/passive-voice
  4. What is middle voice?
  5. Antipassive Constructions