Did the mechanic fix your car? what is the answer of it if we will change it into passive voice
The Correct Answer and Explanation is:
Passive Voice Version:
“Was your car fixed by the mechanic?”
Explanation
The sentence “Did the mechanic fix your car?” is in the active voice, where the subject “the mechanic” performs the action (fixing) on the object “your car.” To change it into the passive voice, we shift the focus from the doer (mechanic) to the receiver of the action (your car).
Step-by-Step Breakdown:
- Identify the components:
- Subject (doer): the mechanic
- Verb (action): fix
- Object (receiver): your car
- Rearrange the sentence:
- Move the object to the subject position: “your car”
- Use the correct form of “to be” for the verb tense. The original question is in past simple tense (did fix), so we use “was” (past form of “to be”) for a singular subject.
- Change the verb to the past participle: “fix” becomes “fixed.”
- Add “by the mechanic” to show who performed the action.
Grammatical Structure in Passive:
- Passive voice structure for questions in past simple tense:
Was/Were + object + past participle + (by + agent)? - Here:
- Was – auxiliary verb (past simple of “to be”)
- your car – subject of the passive sentence
- fixed – past participle of “fix”
- by the mechanic – optional agent (shows who did the action)
Why Use Passive Voice?
We use the passive voice when:
- The doer is unknown, unimportant, or implied.
- The focus is on the action or the receiver of the action rather than the doer.
In this case, if the concern is whether the car was fixed, the passive version emphasizes the result, not the person doing it.
So, the passive question is: “Was your car fixed by the mechanic?”
