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Passive voice with ”se”

Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

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Page 1: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

Passive voice with ”se”

Page 2: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action

is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

A man was murdered yesterday in the park.

(It is not known who killed the man, so the passive voice is used here.)

Newspapers often use the passive voice when the reporters don’t know who the person doing the action

(the agent) was.

Page 3: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

Forming the passive voice is fairly easy to do in Spanish. First you use the passive voice

pronoun “se”, then you use either the singular third person form (if there is only one person

involved) or the plural third person form (if more than one person was involved). Look at these

sentences:A man was murdered yesterday in the park.

Se mató un hombre ayer en el parque.

Two men were murdered yesterday in the park.

Se mataron dos hombres ayer en el parque.

Notice in the first blue sentence that the singular form of the verb “matar” was used, because one man was killed. In the second blue sentence, the plural form of the verb is used,

because more than one man was killed.

Page 4: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

Spanish also uses the passive voice for impersonal expressions like “How do you spell that?” (“How does one spell that?”) or “Spanish is spoken here.” The passive voice is used here because there is not a specified person doing

the action.

No se permite fumar aquí.

Smoking is not permitted here.

¿Cómo se dice “dog” en español?

How do you (does one) say “dog” in Spanish?

Page 5: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

Let’s do some practice. Write the correct passive voice form of the given verb.

Don’t forget the “se” first! _______ casas

aquí. (vender)

se venden!That’s right… it’s

se estaciona!That’s right… it’s

Let’s do a few more. No _______ aquí. (estacionar)

Page 6: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

Ayer [past tense] _______ dos muchachos. (arrestar)

se arrestaron!That’s right… it’s

se robó!That’s right… it’s

Ayer [past tense] _______ un retrato del museo. (robar)

Page 7: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

No _______ hablar inglés en la clase de español. (permitir)

se permite!That’s right… it’s

se venden!That’s right… it’s

_______ vegetales en el mercado. (vender)

Page 8: Passive voice with se. In Spanish and English, the passive voice is used when the person doing the action is unclear or unknown. Look at this sentence:

VOILA!

See how easy that was? Now try some on your

own – click the button to do a practice quiz.

PracticeQuiz

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