Interactive Practice Tool
Use the interactive tool below to improve your grammar skills. Carefully read each sentence and analyze the tense before selecting the correct passive form. This level focuses on understanding how continuous and perfect tenses work in Voice Change.
Voice Change: Medium
Level 2: Core Grammar Rules.
Practice these 50 questions to master tenses, negatives, and interrogative forms.
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You have reached the end of the Medium level. Review your answers or submit for results.
Level 2 Challenge Results
Master Voice Change for Competitive Success
For students preparing for Madhyamik and other board examinations, mastering Voice Change at this stage is essential. While the Easy Level builds your foundation, the Medium Level introduces more complex verb structures and sentence patterns.
If you have already completed the Easy Level, then this is the perfect step forward. At this stage, you will learn how to handle Continuous and Perfect Tenses, which are frequently asked in exams.
Why Move to the Medium Level?
At this level, the difficulty increases because sentences include additional helping verbs. However, the main objective remains the same — shifting focus from the doer (subject) to the action (object).
By practicing this level, you will:
- Understand how auxiliary verbs work in passive voice
- Learn to handle longer and more complex sentences
- Improve accuracy in exam-based questions
Therefore, this level acts as a bridge between basic rules and advanced grammar.
Key Rules for This Level
Firstly, continuous tenses use the word “being” in passive voice.
- Present Continuous:
She is singing a song → A song is being sung by her - Past Continuous:
They were playing football → Football was being played by them
Secondly, perfect tenses use the word “been.”
- Present Perfect:
He has finished the task → The task has been finished by him - Past Perfect:
I had closed the door → The door had been closed by me
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. When do I use ‘being’ and ‘been’?
Use “being” in all continuous tenses to show an ongoing action. Use “been” in perfect tenses to indicate a completed action.
2. Does subject-verb agreement change in passive voice?
Yes. The verb must agree with the new subject (the original object). For example, a singular subject may become plural after transformation.
3. What happens to the ‘ing’ form of the verb?
In passive voice, the main verb always changes to its past participle (V3) form. The continuous aspect is maintained by adding “being.”
Ready for the Ultimate Challenge?
Once you are confident with continuous and perfect tense transformations, you are ready to move to higher levels:
Consistent practice is the key to mastering English grammar. Keep improving step by step, and Voice Change will become one of your strongest scoring areas.