The Passive Sentence - Avoid Overuse
Posted: Thu Apr 17, 2008 8:45 am
Coudn't find a post dealing specifically with passive sentences, but my post was on writing active first sentences: [url]http://www.constant-content.com/forum/v ... php?t=6784[/url]
So let's start a discussion now:
Passive sentences are a poor way to communicate because active sentences are so much more fun to read! Ask yourself which sentences you are drawn to and understood the most:
A)Sally, having been told not to go to the store by her mother, disobeyed.
B)Sally's mother told Sally not to go to the store, but Sally disobeyed.
OR
A) The ball bounced off the wall, after having been thrown by Max.
B) Max threw the ball and it bounced off the wall.
Both examples above have the A) sentence in passive tense, and the B) sentence in present tense. We can all see sentence B) is easier to read and understand, here's why:
Passive sentences take more words. Longer sentences are more difficult to digest, so if you need to cut words in an assignment, just look around for passive sentences.
Passive sentences put the verb before the related noun. This is awkward, and makes the reader remember what happened before who it happened to or who did it. The English language, and English readers, expect a sequence in sentences, the subject, the verb, and then the predicate. When you use the passive voice, this is all jumbled up, and often so is your meaning.
There will be times where passive sentences are unavoidable. A few, such as 1 or 2 in a couple of paragraphs isn't going to make or break a reader's comprehension. However, a writing piece chock full may just make the reader choke on all the words she must swallow! If you have trouble changing passive sentences to active sentences, ask a friend to to look at the sentence, or just take some time away. Chances are when you come back to the piece, light bulbs will go off, and you will have a slew of ways to rewrite the sentence.
So let's start a discussion now:
Passive sentences are a poor way to communicate because active sentences are so much more fun to read! Ask yourself which sentences you are drawn to and understood the most:
A)Sally, having been told not to go to the store by her mother, disobeyed.
B)Sally's mother told Sally not to go to the store, but Sally disobeyed.
OR
A) The ball bounced off the wall, after having been thrown by Max.
B) Max threw the ball and it bounced off the wall.
Both examples above have the A) sentence in passive tense, and the B) sentence in present tense. We can all see sentence B) is easier to read and understand, here's why:
Passive sentences take more words. Longer sentences are more difficult to digest, so if you need to cut words in an assignment, just look around for passive sentences.
Passive sentences put the verb before the related noun. This is awkward, and makes the reader remember what happened before who it happened to or who did it. The English language, and English readers, expect a sequence in sentences, the subject, the verb, and then the predicate. When you use the passive voice, this is all jumbled up, and often so is your meaning.
There will be times where passive sentences are unavoidable. A few, such as 1 or 2 in a couple of paragraphs isn't going to make or break a reader's comprehension. However, a writing piece chock full may just make the reader choke on all the words she must swallow! If you have trouble changing passive sentences to active sentences, ask a friend to to look at the sentence, or just take some time away. Chances are when you come back to the piece, light bulbs will go off, and you will have a slew of ways to rewrite the sentence.