I flew up the stairs to my new apartment, opened the door and skipped over the threshold. I examined the room which looked sufficient and felt generous. Excited to get a better view of the surrounding neighborhood, I threw open the windows and was met with a wonderful smell, freshly baked bread. Living next to a bakery would really be amazing. As I sank into the recycled chair in the middle of the room, I wondered what life away from home would be like. I was ready to see what would come next.
To answer this question, we first have to be clear about what the passive voice is.
In the active voice, the subject is also the one who does the action. For example: I kicked the ball. In this sentence, the subject is "I." The subject is performing the action of kicking.
In the passive voice, however, the subject is not the doer. Instead, the subject of the sentence is acted upon. Consider this example: The ball was kicked by me. The subject is "the ball." Of course, the ball is not doing the kicking. Rather, the ball is being acted upon -- it is being kicked BY someone.
A major clue that the passive voice is being used is the presence of a being verb. A being verb is any form of the verb "to be" -- am, is, are, was, were, be, being, or been.
Now, in the above examples, only option B. appears to have a being verb. However, let's double check.
In the other options, the pronoun "We" is the subject, and "we" are the ones playing, talking, and enjoying. That means answers A, C, and D. are all rewritten in the active voice.
In option B, "Play," "talk" and "a good time" are the subjects of the sentence. Of course, these things can do nothing on their own. This sentence also has being verbs present (the verb "was"), meaning this sentence is written in the passive voice.
For this reason, option B. is the correct answer.
Answer:
maybe this will help? Good luck!
Explanation:
The other one is an example of a normal blog entry
Answer:
A Doll's House is full of dramatic irony. For example, Nora expresses her happiness at the beginning of the play by saying that her husband is employed in a higher post and they need not to worry about their future. ... Nora has been poor. In fact, she is not so conscious of this reality.
Answer:
1.A mentally ill young woman, possibly named Jane, who´s suffering from “nervous depression” or most likely postpartum depression.
This point of view is necessary because the whole narration comes from her journal, which she has been forbidden from writing on, and which she uses as a way to ease her mind. However, that same point of view helps the reader realize that she´s falling deeper into her illness.
2. At first, the narrator seems perfectly reliable, despite her mental condition. However, as her fixation on the yellow wallpaper grows, the reader learns that she´s falling deeper into her illness, becoming less and less reliable. By the end, nothing she writes can be considered as part of reality.