Advanced Passive: Reporting & Two Objects
At B2 the passive goes beyond the basics. You learn passive reporting structures (used to distance yourself from a claim) and the passive with two objects. These are common in…
At B2 the passive goes beyond the basics. You learn passive reporting structures (used to distance yourself from a claim) and the passive with two objects. These are common in news, academic writing and formal English.
Passive reporting (distancing)
When we report what people say or believe without naming them, two passive patterns are used with verbs like say, believe, think, know, report, expect, consider:
| Pattern | Example |
|---|---|
| It + is + past participle + that… | It is said that he is very rich. |
| Subject + is + past participle + to-infinitive | He is said to be very rich. |
Passive with two objects
Verbs like give, send, offer, tell, show, pay have two objects, so either can become the subject of the passive — usually the person:
| Active | Passive (preferred) |
|---|---|
| They gave Aisha a prize. | Aisha was given a prize. |
| They sent me an email. | I was sent an email. |
Examples from EduCareer
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- He is said that he is rich. → He is said to be rich. / It is said that he is rich.
- She is believed to left. → She is believed to have left.
- A prize was given to Aisha a medal. → Aisha was given a prize.
Practise with the 20 questions below.
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