Author Topic: Constructing the perfect tenses in the passive voice  (Read 6262 times)

Joe Carillo

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Constructing the perfect tenses in the passive voice
« on: October 01, 2020, 07:03:41 AM »
When you can’t properly situate or correlate different actions or events as they happen in time, it’s symptomatic of an inadequate grasp of the perfect tenses in the passive voice.

This was evidently true in the case of a Forum member who had this predicament six-and-a-half years ago: “I can’t remember anymore when and where exactly I got this idea, but I still hesitate every time I add ‘been’ to ‘has,’ ‘have,’ and ‘had.’ Should writers really refrain from doing so?”

In my reply, I said that it’s most unfortunate when writers avoid using the forms “has been,” “have been,” and “had been” like a pandemic. They are depriving themselves of the opportunity to use the English language to the fullest advantage when crafting narratives or expressing their thoughts and ideas.

One’s trepidation about those three verbal auxiliaries indicates unfamiliarity with—and lack of confidence in—the use of the perfect tenses in the passive voice. Recall that “been” is the past participle of the verb “be,” and that “been” in tandem with the helping verb “have” serves as auxiliary to the past participle or progressive form of the operative verb. Altogether, they form the various perfect tenses in the passive voice.



At first the perfect tenses in the passive voice seem overwhelmingly complicated, but they get much simpler to understand when broken down into their five forms:

1. Past perfect in the passive voice = had + been + past participle of the verb. This is for action completed (finished or “perfected”) at some point in the past before something else happened. Example: “The fancy car had been sold before we got to the auction house yesterday.”

2. Past perfect progressive in the passive voice = had + been + progressive form of the verb. This is for continuous action completed at some point in the past. Example: “The building had been rumbling for several minutes before it collapsed.”

3. Present perfect in the passive voice = has/have + been + progressive form of the verb. This is for continuous action that was finished at some point in the recent past or that started in the past and continues to happen. Examples: “That truck has been rusting at our backyard so we decided just now to have it refurbished.” “The speculator is on a buying spree now that stock prices have been falling precipitously.”

4. Future perfect in the passive voice = will/shall + have + past participle of the verb. This is for action that will have been completed (finished or “perfected”) at some point in the future. Example: “By the time we get the funds to make the purchase next week, the promotional offer will have expired.” (For both a singular and a plural subject, “will have/shall have” applies.)

5. Future perfect progressive in the passive voice = will/shall + have been + progressive form of the verb. This is for continuous action that will be completed at some point in the future. Example: “When you visit us in the Philippines on March 31, 2021, we will have been celebrating the 500th year festivities of our birth as a nation for three months, with nine more to go.”

Take note that in the perfect tenses in the passive voice, the subject of the sentence will always be the receiver of the action of the verb, never its doer, and the verb will have to be intransitive—meaning that it doesn’t have or can’t take a direct object.

Keep in mind, though, that some verbs can either be transitive or intransitive depending on how they are used. To keep out of trouble when doing past perfect constructions in the passive voice, you must figure this out first with the verb you are using.

(Next: Is there such a thing as a complex-complex sentence?)       October 8, 2020

This essay, 2,013th of the series, appeared in the column “English Plain and Simple” by Jose A. Carillo in the Campus Press section of the October 1, 2020 Internet edition of The Manila Times,© 2020 by the Manila Times Publishing Corp. All rights reserved.

Read this online in The Manila Times:
“Constructing the perfect tenses in the passive voice”