<h3>
Active.</h3>
Phil <em>went </em><em>to</em> a movie with his friends.
Phil is the subject
went to is the verb
a movie is the object
Active voice is subject + verb + object
Passive voice is object + verb to be + verb (past participle) + subject
The sentence in passive voice:
A movie <em>was gone to</em> by Phil and his friends.
A movie is the object
was gone to is the verb
Phil and his friends is the subject
However, people are usually more important so they should be mentioned first.
1. At Jack Johnson concerts, plastic bottles are not sold.
2. Fans will be encouraged to bring reusable water bottles to the concerts.
3. Millions of bottles a year are produced by manufacturers.
4. Too much plastic has been used by us. (or don't include the "by us")
5. Most of our plastic water bottles are not recycled by us. (or don't include the "by us")
6. Animals are harmed by plastic waste.
10 examples of nonliving things are:
1. Rocks
2. Sofas.
3. Pencils.
4. Wheels.
5. Erasers.
6. Footballs.
7. Pencil pouch.
8. Lamp.
9. Shingles.
10. Laptop.
<span>The statement which is true about a short story is that it uses narrative techniques (e.g. plot, characters, setting, and conflict). A short story is similar to any other story - the only difference is that it is much shorter in length. It may use logical explanation, or it may not - it really depends on the story. The second option (the one about dramatic elements) refers to plays, not short stories. It doesn't use nonfiction, because short stories are fiction.</span>
The answer is "she" -- which was "heo" in Old English. (He, me, and we have all been relatively unchanged since the time of Old English.)