|
|
|
|
|
|
NEWSLETTERJoin my mailing list to receive my regular newsletter full of helpful tips for improving your communication skills. |
|
Use Active Not Passive Voice'Voice' is a grammatical term that refers to whether the subject of the sentence is acting or receiving the action. Using active voice can considerably improve your writing style. Active voice makes your writing more interesting, more lively and more ... well, active! Check out these two examples of a similar message: Active voice: Tim played the violin. Here, the subject is the actor, Tim. You can almost see Tim playing the violin, totally absorbed in his music. The sentence is alive and interesting. Passive voice: The violin was played by Tim. Here, the subject is the violin. The action is gone. The emphasis has been moved from the subject performing the action to the subject receiving the action. It is not so easy to visualise what is happening. The sentence is dull and boring. Here are some tips that may help you to tell when a sentence is passive:
Passive voice was preferred by our great-grandfathers because they did not want to show any responsibility in their writing. It also created a distance between the writer and the reader. Yes, passive voice was perfect for our great grandfathers. Our writing today, however, should show responsibility, and it should be more personal and natural, more focused. Remember my golden rule "If you wouldn't say it, don't write it!" Is passive voice ever appropriate?Yes, there are some occasions when passive voice would be more appropriate.
» Click here to try a quiz. |
|
| Home | About Shirley | Shirley's Books | Articles | A-Z of Bloopers | Photo Gallery | Contact | ||||
|
|
© 2009 Shirley Taylor, ST Training Solutions Pte Ltd. All rights reserved. |
|
||
|
|
||||