Nama : Farah Indah Lestari
Npm : 22211694
Kelas : 3EB02
Active
Voice
A feature of sentences
in which the subject performs the action of the verb and the direct object is
the goal or the recipient: The mechanic fixed the car.
Passive
Voice
A feature of sentences
in which the object or goal of the action functions as the sentence subject and
the main verb phrase includes the verb to be and the past participle: The
car was fixed by the mechanic.
Example:
Harry ate six shrimp at dinner. (active)
At dinner, six shrimp were eaten by Harry. (passive)
At dinner, six shrimp were eaten by Harry. (passive)
Beautiful giraffes roam the savannah. (active)
The savannah is roamed by beautiful giraffes. (passive)
The savannah is roamed by beautiful giraffes. (passive)
Sue changed the flat tire. (active)
The flat tire was changed by Sue. (passive)
The flat tire was changed by Sue. (passive)
We are going to watch a movie tonight. (active)
A movie is going to be watched by us tonight. (passive)
A movie is going to be watched by us tonight. (passive)
I ran the obstacle course in record time. (active)
The obstacle course was run by me in record time. (passive)
The obstacle course was run by me in record time. (passive)
The crew paved the entire stretch of highway.
(active)
The entire stretch of highway was paved by the crew. (passive)
The entire stretch of highway was paved by the crew. (passive)
Mom read the novel in one day. (active)
The novel was read by Mom in one day. (passive)
The novel was read by Mom in one day. (passive)
The critic wrote a scathing review. (active)
A scathing review was written by the critic. (passive)
A scathing review was written by the critic. (passive)
I will clean the house every Saturday. (active)
The house will be cleaned by me every Saturday. (passive)
The house will be cleaned by me every Saturday. (passive)
The staff is required to watch a safety video every
year. (active)
A safety video will be watched by the staff every year. (passive)
A safety video will be watched by the staff every year. (passive)
She faxed her application for a new job. (active)
The application for a new job was faxed by her. (passive)
The application for a new job was faxed by her. (passive)
Tom painted the entire house. (active)
The entire house was painted by Tom. (passive)
The entire house was painted by Tom. (passive)
The teacher always answers the students’ questions.
(active)
The students’ questions are always answered by the teacher. (passive)
The students’ questions are always answered by the teacher. (passive)
The choir really enjoys that piece. (active)
That piece is really enjoyed by the choir. (passive)
That piece is really enjoyed by the choir. (passive)
Who taught you to ski? (active)
By whom were you taught to ski? (passive)
By whom were you taught to ski? (passive)
The forest fire destroyed the whole suburb. (active)
The whole suburb was destroyed by the forest fire. (passive)
The whole suburb was destroyed by the forest fire. (passive)
The two kings are signing the treaty. (active)
The treaty is being signed by the two kings. (passive)
The treaty is being signed by the two kings. (passive)
The cleaning crew vacuums and dusts the office every
night. (active)
Every night the office is vacuumed and dusted by the cleaning crew. (passive)
Every night the office is vacuumed and dusted by the cleaning crew. (passive)
Larry generously donated money to the homeless
shelter. (active)
Money was generously donated to the homeless shelter by Larry. (passive)
Money was generously donated to the homeless shelter by Larry. (passive)
No one responded to my sales ad. (active)
My sales ad was not responded to by anyone. (passive)
My sales ad was not responded to by anyone. (passive)
The wedding planner is making all the
reservations. (active)
All the reservations will be made by the wedding planner. (passive)
All the reservations will be made by the wedding planner. (passive)
Susan will bake two dozen cupcakes for the bake
sale. (active)
For the bake sale, two dozen cookies will be baked by Susan. (passive)
For the bake sale, two dozen cookies will be baked by Susan. (passive)
The science class viewed the comet. (active)
The comet was viewed by the science class. (passive)
The comet was viewed by the science class. (passive)
Who ate the last cookie? (active)
The last cookie was eaten by whom? (passive)
The last cookie was eaten by whom? (passive)
Alex posted the video on Facebook. (active)
The video was posted on Facebook by Alex. (passive)
The video was posted on Facebook by Alex. (passive)
The director will give you instructions. (active)
Instructions will be given to you by the director. (passive)
Instructions will be given to you by the director. (passive)
Thousands of tourists view the Grand Canyon every
year. (active)
The Grand Canyon is viewed by thousands of tourists every year. (passive)
The Grand Canyon is viewed by thousands of tourists every year. (passive)
The homeowners remodeled the house to help it sell.
(active)
The house was remodeled by the homeowners to help it sell. (passive)
The house was remodeled by the homeowners to help it sell. (passive)
The team will celebrate their victory tomorrow.
(active)
The victory will be celebrated by the team tomorrow. (passive)
The victory will be celebrated by the team tomorrow. (passive)
The saltwater eventually corroded the metal beams.
(active)
The metal beams were eventually corroded by the saltwater. (passive)
The metal beams were eventually corroded by the saltwater. (passive)
The kangaroo carried her baby in her pouch. (active)
The baby was carried by the kangaroo in her pouch. (passive)
The baby was carried by the kangaroo in her pouch. (passive)
Some people raise sugar cane in Hawaii. (active)
Sugar cane is raised by some people in Hawaii. (passive)
Sugar cane is raised by some people in Hawaii. (passive)
Exercise:
PASSIVE
VERB FORMS
Change the verb to the
active voice and rewrite the sentence. Be sure to keep the same tense. In some
cases, it will be necessary to supply a subject (see the second example).
1. The books
were taken by John.
John took the books.
2. The boxes
were mailed today.
He mailed the boxes
today.
3. The two
packages were opened by my secretary.
My secretary opened the
two packages.
4. Our homework
is corrected by our teacher.
Our teacher corrects
our homework.
5. Two buildings
have been constructed by that company.
That company had
constructed two buildings.
6. That room
wasn’t cleaned carefully yesterday.
He didn’t clean that
room carefully yesterday.
7. The truck is
being loaded by the men now.
The men are loading the
truck now.
8. Was that
machine checked by the inspector?
Did the inspector check
that machine?
9. Will that
report be written by the same committee?
Will the same committee
write that report?
10. Has the news been announced by the
president yet?
Has the president
announced the news yet?
11. The mail is delivered to this office
twice a day.
This office receives
the mail twice a day.
12. All of us were surprised by his
frank attitude.
His frank attitude
surprised all of us.
13. Was the repair work done by the
mechanic?
Did the mechanic do the
repair work?
14. He wasn’t very much respected by the
employees.
The employees didn’t
respect him very much.
15. Are many courses in English given
during the summer?
Are they giving many
courses in English during the summer?
USING
PASSIVE VERBS
Change the verb to the passive voice and rewrite the
sentence. Be sure to keep the same tense.
1. He signed the
letter.
The letter was signed
by him.
2. The secretary
opens the mail every morning.
The mails is opened by
the secretary every morning.
3. The committee
is considering that proposal right now.
That proposal is being
considered by the committee right now.
4. The army will
complete that project next year.
That project will be
completed by the army next year.
5. His boss has
transferred him to another department.
He has been transferred
to another department by his boss.
6. Will the
company distribute the announcements?
Will the announcements
be distributed by the company?
7. An
artist wrote that interesting article about Paris.
That interesting
article about Paris was written by an artist.
8. Today a large
number of people speak English.
English is spoken by a
large number of people today.
9. Didn’t they
return those books to the library?
Were those books not
return by them to the library?
10. The government has not changed that
regulation yet.
That regulation has not
been changed by the government yet.
11. Someone stole all her valuable
jewelry last night.
All her valuable
jewelry were stolen by someone last night.
12. Miss Peters wrote all of the reports
for Mr. Johnson.
All of the reports were
written my Miss Peters for Mr. Johnson.
13. Bad weather has delayed Flight 202
from Miami.
Flight 202 from Miami
has been delayed due to bad weather.
14. Did the court divide the money among
the children?
Were the money divided
by the court among the children?
15. Many scholars have translated that famous
Greek epic.
That famous Greek epic
has been translated by many scholars.
ACTIVE
vs PASSIVE
Use the correct voice (active or passive) and the
correct tense of verb in each sentence.
1. Everyone
(shock) by the terrible news yesterday.
Active
: The terrible news was shocked everyone yesterday.
2. Almost
everyone (enjoy) the lecture last night.
Passive
: The lecture was enjoyed by almost everyone last night.
3. English
(teach) in the schools of almost every nation.
Active
: English taught in the schools of almost every nation.
4. That proposal
(consider) by the members right now.
Passive
: That proposal is considering by the members right now.
5. The accident
(happen) right here at 6:30 last night.
Active
: The accident happened right here at 6:30 last night.
6. Smith (teach)
at the University of Washington since 1948.
Active
: Smith has taught at the University of Washington since 1948.
7. Mr. Harris
(divide) the class into two sections tomorrow.
Passive
: The class will be divided into two sections by Mr. Harris tomorrow.
8. Wilson
(borrow) the money from Brown two weeks ago.
Active
: Wilson borrowed the money from Brown two weeks ago.
9. Not much
(say) about the matter since that time.
Active
: Not much said about the matter since that time.
10. My friend (write) to me about it
several times now.
Active
: My friend is writing to me about it several times now.
11. Davis (promote) to the rank of
sergeant last week.
Active
: Davis was promoted to the rank of sergeant last week.
12. That event (occur) shortly after the
meeting last week.
Active
: That event occurred shortly after the meeting last week.
13. All the students (bring) guests to
the party tomorrow night.
Passive
: Guests will be brought by all the students to the party tomorrow night.
14. Less than half of the cans of paint
(use) up to now.
Passive
: The cans of paint is being used less than half up to now.
15. More classes in English (list) in
the catalog next fall.
Passive
: The catalog will be listed more classes in English next fall.
16. Everything (go) well so far. There
(be) no trouble yet.
Active
: Everything is going well so far. There is no trouble yet.
17. That movie about Napoleon’s life
(disappoint) me greatly.
Active
: That movie about Napoleon’s life disappointed me greatly.
18. The mail (deliver, always) to this
office before 10 a.m.
Active
: The mail is always deliver to this office before 10 a.m.
19. Who (furnish) the food for the
picnic next weekend?
Active
: Who will furnish the food for the picnic next weekend?
20. At this time, much attention
(devote) to that problem.
Active
: At this time, much attention is devoting to that problem.
21. Think carefully. I’m sure you
(remember) his name.
Active
: Think carefully. I’m sure you remember his name.
22. We (treat) very kindly by our hosts
last Saturday.
Active
: Our hosts were treated us very kindly last Saturday.
23. Mr. Wilson (make) something
interesting statements yesterday.
Passive
: Something interesting statements were made by Mr. Wilson yesterday.
24. A new textbook (publish) by that
company next year.
Active
: That company will publish a new textbook next year.
25. The noise from the trains (annoy) me
terribly last night.
Active
: The noise from the trains annoyed me terribly last night.
26. That old red house (build) in the
year 1822.
Active
: That old red house was built in the year 1822.
27. The report (examine, not) by a
committee of experts yet.
Active
: A committee of expert has not examine the report yet.
28. Cocktails (serve) to the guests
about 10 minutes from now.
Passive
: Cocktails will be served to the guests about 10 minutes from now.
29. His sharp remarks (embarrass)
everyone last night.
Active
: His sharp remarks embarrassed everyone last night.
30. Fred (introduce) to the fellow
by Mr. Brown yesterday.
Active
: Mr. Brown introduced Fred to the fellow yesterday.
31. Listen to this! I think this news
(surprise) you!
Active
: Listen to this! I think this news will surprise you!
32. The Ajax Shoe Company (employ) 25
new men next month.
Active
: The Ajax Shoe Company will employ 25 new men next month.
33. Only 25 new students (admit) into
the department in 1955.
Active
: Only 25 new students were admitted into the department in 1955.
34. A second coat of paint (spread) over
that surface tomorrow.
Active
: A second coat of paint will spread over that surface tomorrow.
LIFE OF PI
Piscine Molitor Patel
Piscine Molitor Patel is the
protagonist and, for most of the novel, the narrator. In the chapters that
frame the main story, Pi, as a shy, graying, middle-aged man, tells the author
about his early childhood and the shipwreck that changed his life. This
narrative device distances the reader from the truth. We don’t know whether
Pi’s story is accurate or what pieces to believe. This effect is intentional;
throughout Pi emphasizes the importance of choosing the better story, believing
that imagination trumps cold, hard facts. As a child, he reads widely and
embraces many religions and their rich narratives that provide meaning and
dimension to life. In his interviews with the Japanese investigators after his
rescue, he offers first the more fanciful version of his time at sea. But, at
their behest, he then provides an alternative version that is more realistic
but ultimately less appealing to both himself and his questioners. The
structure of the novel both illustrates Pi’s defining characteristic, his
dependence on and love of stories, and highlights the inherent difficulties in
trusting his version of events.
Though the narrative jumps back
and forth in time, the novel traces Pi’s development and maturation in a
traditional bildungsroman, or coming-of-age story. Pi is an eager, outgoing,
and excitable child, dependent on his family for protection and guidance. In
school, his primary concerns involve preventing his schoolmates from
mispronouncing his name and learning as much as he can about religion and
zoology. But when the ship sinks, Pi is torn from his family and left alone on
a lifeboat with wild animals. The disaster serves as the catalyst in his
emotional growth; he must now become self-sufficient. Though he mourns the loss
of his family and fears for his life, he rises to the challenge. He finds a
survival guide and emergency provisions. Questioning his own values, he decides
that his vegetarianism is a luxury under the conditions and learns to fish. He
capably protects himself from Richard Parker and even assumes a parental
relationship with the tiger, providing him with food and keeping him in line.
The devastating shipwreck turns Pi into an adult, able to fend for himself out
in the world alone.
Pi’s belief in God inspires him
as a child and helps sustain him while at sea. In Pondicherry, his atheistic
biology teacher challenges his Hindu faith in God, making him realize the
positive power of belief, the need to overcome the otherwise bleakness of the
universe. Motivated to learn more, Pi starts practicing Christianity and Islam,
realizing these religions all share the same foundation: belief in a loving
higher power. His burgeoning need for spiritual connection deepens while at
sea. In his first days on the lifeboat, he almost gives up, unable to bear the
loss of his family and unwilling to face the difficulties that still await him.
At that point, however, he realizes that the fact he is still alive means that
God is with him; he has been given a miracle. This thought gives him strength,
and he decides to fight to remain alive. Throughout his adventure, he prays
regularly, which provides him with solace, a sense of connection to something
greater, and a way to pass the time.
Richard Parker
The Royal Bengal tiger with whom
Pi shares his lifeboat. His captor, Richard Parker, named him Thirsty, but a
shipping clerk made a mistake and reversed their names. From then on, at the
Pondicherry Zoo, he was known as Richard Parker. Weighing 450 pounds and about nine feet long, he kills the hyena
on the lifeboat and the blind cannibal. With Pi, however, Richard Parker acts
as an omega, or submissive, animal, respecting Pi’s dominance.
The Hyena
An ugly, intensely violent
animal. He controls the lifeboat before Richard Parker emerges.
A beautiful male Grant’s zebra.
He breaks his leg jumping into the lifeboat. The hyena torments him and eats
him alive.
The maternal orangutan that
floats to the lifeboat on a raft of bananas. She suffers almost humanlike bouts
of loneliness and seasickness. When the hyena attacks her, she fights back
valiantly but is nonetheless killed and decapitated.
The Author
The narrator of the (fictitious)
Author’s Note, who inserts himself into the narrative at several points
throughout the text. Though the author who pens the Author’s Note never
identifies himself by name, there are many clues that indicate it is Yann
Martel himself, thinly disguised: he lives in Canada, has published two books,
and was inspired to write Pi’s life story during a trip to India.
Ravi
Pi’s older brother. Ravi prefers
sports to schoolwork and is quite popular. He teases his younger brother mercilessly
over his devotion to three religions.
Pi’s father. He once owned a
Madras hotel, but because of his deep interest in animals decided to run the
Pondicherry Zoo. A worrier by nature, he teaches his sons not only to care for
and control wild animals, but to fear them. Though raised a Hindu, he is not
religious and is puzzled by Pi’s adoption of numerous religions. The difficult
conditions in India lead him to move his family to Canada.
Gita Patel
Pi’s beloved mother and protector.
A book lover, she encourages Pi to read widely. Raised Hindu with a Baptist
education, she does not subscribe to any religion and questions Pi’s religious
declarations. She speaks her mind, letting her husband know when she disagrees
with his parenting techniques. When Pi relates another version of his story to
his rescuers, she takes the place of Orange Juice on the lifeboat.
Review
Pi Patel, an immigrant from Pondicherry in India
living in Montreal, Canada, is approached by a local novelist, who has been
referred to him by his "uncle" (a family friend), believing that Pi's
life story would make a great book. Pi relates an extended tale:
His parents had named him Piscine
Molitor after a swimming pool in France. He changes his name to "Pi"
(the mathematical symbol,) when he begins secondary school, even repeating
numerous digits of pi, because he is tired of being taunted with the nickname
"Pissing Patel". His family owns a local zoo, and Pi takes an
interest in the animals, especially a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker because
of a clerical error. Pi tries to feed the tiger, endangering himself to being
attacked, and to teach him the reality of the tiger's nature as a carnivore,
Pi's father, Santosh Patel, forces him to witness it killing a goat. He is raised Hindu
and vegetarian, but at 12 years old, he is introduced to Christianity and then
Islam, and starts to follow all three religions as he "just wants to love
God." When asked if he is also Jewish, he replies that he lectures in
Kabbalah at the university.
When Pi is 16, his father decides
to close the zoo and move his family to Canada, and sell the zoo animals, to
ensure a good future for his children. They book passage with their animals (to
be sold in North America) on a Japanese freighter named the Tsimtsum. On board
the ship, Pi's father gets into an argument with the ship's cook , when he speaks to Pi's
mother, Gita Patel rudely. One night, the ship encounters a heavy storm and
begins to sink while Pi is on deck marveling at the storm. He tries to find his
family, but a crew member throws him into a lifeboat; from the rough sea, he
watches helplessly as the ship sinks, killing his family and its crew.
After the storm, Pi finds himself
in the lifeboat with an injured zebra, and is joined by an orangutan, named
Orange Juice, who lost her offspring in the shipwreck. A spotted hyena emerges
from the tarp covering half of the boat, and kills the zebra. To Pi's distress,
the hyena also mortally wounds the orangutan in a fight. Suddenly Richard
Parker emerges from under the tarp, and kills and eats the hyena.
Pi finds emergency food and water
rations on the boat. He builds a small raft of flotation devices so that he can
stay at a safe distance from the tiger. Realizing that he must feed the tiger
to protect himself, Pi begins fishing, with some success. He also collects rain
water for both to drink. At one point, he makes a board ladder for the tiger to
climb back into the boat after it had jumped off to hunt fish. In a nighttime
encounter with a breaching whale, Pi loses much of his supplies. Faced with
starvation, he eats raw fish. After many days at sea, Pi realizes that he can
no longer live on the tiny raft and trains the tiger Richard Parker to accept
him in the boat. He also realizes that caring for the tiger is keeping him
alive.
After weeks longer at sea, near
the end of their strength, they reach a floating island of edible plants,
supporting a forest, fresh water pools, and a large population of meerkats.
Both Pi and Richard Parker eat and drink freely and regain strength. But at
night the island transforms into a hostile environment, with the fresh water
turning acidic, digesting all the dead fish that died in the pools. The tiger
returns to the lifeboat at night. Pi finds a human tooth inside a plant flower
and concludes that the plants are carnivorous, requiring them to leave the
island.
The lifeboat eventually reaches
the coast of Mexico. Finally back on land, Richard Parker stumbles away from Pi
and stops at the edge of the jungle. Pi expects that the tiger will turn toward
him and acknowledge him, but instead he looks into the jungle for a while and
goes in. Pi, too weak to follow, lies in the sand. He is rescued by a group who
carry him to hospital, but he weeps that the tiger had walked away without him.
In hospital, insurance agents for
the Japanese freighter come to hear his account of the incident. They find his
story unbelievable, and ask him to tell them what "really" happened,
if only for the credibility of their report. He answers with a less fantastic
but detailed account of sharing the lifeboat with his mother, a sailor with a
broken leg, and the cook. In this story, the cook kills the sailor to use him
as bait and food. In a later struggle, Pi's mother pushes him to safety on a smaller
raft, and the cook stabs her as she falls overboard to the sharks. Later, Pi
returns to grab the knife and kills the cook.
In the present, the writer notes
parallels between the two stories: the orangutan was Pi's mother, the zebra was
the sailor, the hyena was the cook, and Richard Parker, the tiger, was Pi
himself. Pi asks him which story the writer prefers; he chooses the one with
the tiger because it "is the better story", to which Pi responds,
"And so it is with God". Glancing at a copy of the insurance report,
the writer notices a closing comment about the remarkable feat of surviving 227
days at sea, especially with a tiger - meaning that the agents chose that story
as well.
Review from me
This movie has a message of
courage, endurance and faith. It manifests openly about different religions and
also teaches good values they must have young and adults, as obedience, respect
and companionship. Most impressive are the scenery and effects where the story
unfolds, seem unreal. The story is between reality and fiction, for the
character was a great experience, although he suffered was able to learn and
grow during the shipwreck. You decide whether or not to believe in the story, I
do believe it's true and it's possible, I have no negative reviews about this
movie. This movie is suitable for all ages, I really enjoyed to see this movie.
