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As you write your essay, remember to focus on verbs and keep adjectives to a minimum. Pumping your sentences full of adjectives and adverbs is not the same thing as adding detail or color. Adjectives and adverbs add lazy description, but verbs add action. Passive Tense Our editors find that one of the greatest weaknesses of admissions essays is their frequent use of the passive tense. For this mini-lesson you will learn why the passive voice should be avoided, how to identify it, and how to replace it with the preferred active voice. Overuse of the passive voice throughout an essay can make your prose seem flat and uninteresting. Sentences in active voice are also more concise than those in passive voice. You can recognize passive-voice expressions because the verb phrase will always include a form of to be, such as am, is, was, were, are, or been. The presence of a be-verb, however, does not necessarily mean that the sentence is in passive voice. In sentences written in passive voice, the subject receives the action expressed in the verb; the subject is acted upon. In sentences written in active voice, the subject performs the action expressed in the verb; the subject acts.
EXERCISE #4: STRONG VERBS vs. WEAK VERBS Fill in the blanks using the most descriptive or active verb phrase.
a) was beginning to master b) began to master c) mastered 2. My newspaper article on the labor strikes __________ both praise and criticism. a) generated b) got c) was the recipient of 3. Once I joined the debate team, I __________ the opportunity to compete every weekend. a) sought b) had c) was exposed to 4. Samuel’s touchdown __________ the stadium crowd. a) created much energy in b) energized c) really energized 5. Woolf’s essay __________ my opinion of gender inequality. a) challenged b) made me take another look at c) was challenging to 6. As Jessica drew near me, I __________ the baton and took off running. a) grasped b) got c) was given 7. Once my mother had fallen asleep, I __________ the dolls on her nightstand. a) put b) arranged c) set up 8. Chris and I __________ an educational project for first-graders in our community. a) began b) started c) initiated 9. “Why didn’t you ask me before throwing it away?” Jason __________. a) hollered b) said angrily c) started to yell 10. Mr. Franklin __________ that he was our true father. a) let us know b) told us c) revealed Answers: 1) c; 2) a; 3) a; 4) b; 5) a; 6) a; 7) b; 8) c; 9) a; 10) c; Changing Passive Voice to Active Voice If you want to change a passive-voice sentence to active voice, find the agent in the phrase, the person or thing that is performing the action expressed in the verb. Make that agent the subject of the sentence, and change the verb accordingly. For many instances of the passive voice in your essay, you can follow these steps:
EXERCISE #5: MAKING SENTENCES MORE ACTIVE Change these sentences from passive voice to active voice, or note if no change should be made.
Answers:
EXERCISE #6: PASSIVE-FREE WRITING Write a 100-word essay on anything at all (preferably relating to your essay topic) without using any form of the verb “to be.”
Copyright 1998 by Dan Kaufman. Reprinted by arrangement with Barron's Educational Series, Inc.
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