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Interactive Grammar: Agent in Passive Voice quiz

Understand when to include and when to omit the agent (by + noun) in passive sentences, and how it changes emphasis and formality.

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Grammar Explanation · Authentic Examples · Practice Questions

Lesson progressNot started
Duration
~15 min
Questions
10
Level
Intermediate

Overview

The agent is the person or thing that performs the action in a passive sentence, introduced by 'by': The letter was written by the manager. The agent is often omitted when it is unknown, obvious, or unimportant. Including the agent shifts focus back to the doer and adds specificity.

The Agent (by + noun)

  • definitionThe agent is the person/thing performing the action.
  • structurePassive subject + be + past participle + by + agent.
  • exampleThe novel was written by Orwell.
  • includeInclude 'by' when the agent is important or surprising.
  • omitOmit 'by' when unknown, obvious, or unimportant.

Include vs Omit Agent

  • includeThe Mona Lisa was painted by Leonardo da Vinci. (important)
  • omitThe car was stolen last night. (unknown)
  • omitThe letter was signed. (obvious)
  • omitMistakes were made. (vague — often evasive)
  • includeThe law was passed by Parliament. (specific)

Common Mistakes

  • ❌ It was done from the team → ✅ by the team.
  • ❌ Overusing 'by' → omit when agent is irrelevant.
  • It was written by someone → better to omit 'by someone'.

When to use

Attribution

The symphony was composed by Beethoven.

Unknown Agent

The documents were leaked last week.

Legal Writing

The contract was breached by the defendant.

Scientific Reports

The experiment was conducted by the research team.

Agent in Passive Voice — Multiple Choice

Decide whether to include or omit the agent in each sentence.

Multiple Choice10 questions
1'The Mona Lisa was painted Leonardo da Vinci.' Which is correct?
2When should the agent be omitted?
3My wallet was stolen night. Agent: (unknown) — include or omit?
4The law was passed Parliament.
5Patients are treated doctors. Is the agent needed?
6'Mistakes were made.' What does omitting the agent suggest?
7Which agent sentence is correct?
8The experiment was conducted the research team.
9Which is better? (agent is unknown)
10The agent phrase uses: + noun.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this lesson on agent in Passive Voice cover?

Understand when to include and when to omit the agent (by + noun) in passive sentences, and how it changes emphasis and formality.

Which CEFR level is this lesson designed for?

This lesson is designed for Intermediate (B1) learners and forms part of the Agent in Passive Voice section on Grammartier.

What is the best approach for studying this grammar topic?

Start with the definition, then study the examples carefully to understand how the pattern works in context. Practise identifying the structure in authentic sentences before producing your own — this recognition-first approach builds a strong foundation for accurate, confident use.

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