Table of Contents
What is the passive voice of Pappu laughed at me?
Active voice: Pappu laughed at me. Passive voice: I was being laughed at by Pappu.
What does it mean to laugh at somebody?
(laugh at someone/something) to say unkind things about someone or something that are intended to make them seem silly. The other kids laughed at his haircut.
What is the Passive Voice of He teaches us grammar?
Complete answer: Option a ‘Grammar was taught to us by him.
What is Passive Voice of the boy laughed at the Joker?
Answer: The joker was laughed by the boy.
Did you see him laughing change in passive voice?
Answer: Did laughing by him seen by you?
What is the passive voice of the sentence to laugh?
To laugh is an intransitive verb and therefore does not have a passive voice. Passive voice requires that the original active sentence has a direct Object. A passive sentence is created by making the direct object (of the original sentence) the subject of the passive sentence. What is the direct object of the sentence provided in the question?
Is “he laughed at me” passive or active?
“He laughed at me,” seems to become passive when changed to “I was laughed at by him.” Notice what happened to the preposition, at. In the so-called passive sentence, it has become part of the verb, i.e. “laughed at”in which a normal verb is combined with a preposition called a phrasal verb. At no longer introduces the indirect object.
What is the correct way to say Let me not be laughed at?
Let ME not be laughed at. is “Let + O + NOT + Be + Past participle ”. It looks more appropriate in all of them. This is an Imperative sentence. If the Imperative is with the object of the verb (transitive) , it has two answers.
Is the sentence “Let me not be laughed at” grammatically correct?
Although “”Let me not be laughed at” is structurally/ grammatically possible, it seems to me that this sentence does not have the power/aggressiveness of the version I have suggested. (Let The given sentence is imperative in structure. The sentence shows deep hurt and anger (due to the resultant humiliation).