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#2 (permalink) Mon Jul 16, 2007 22:07 pm passive continuous sentences |
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Hi Prodigy
Just as verbs can be used in simple tenses and continuous tenses in the active voice, they can also be used in simple and continuous tenses in the passive voice.
Here are some examples:
1. They sell Dell PCs here. --> simple present tense, active voice 2. Dell PCs are sold here. --> simple present tense, passive voice
3. Someone is singing a beautiful song. --> present continuous tense, active voice 4. A beautiful song is being sung. --> present continuous tense, passive voice
5. Someone was singing a beautiful song. --> past continuous tense, active voice 6. A beautiful song was being sung. --> past continuous tense, passive voice
To build the passive, you need a form of the verb 'be' and the past participle of the verb. To build a passive past continuous form of the verb 'sing' (as in sentence 6 above), you need the past continuous form of the verb 'be' plus the past participle of 'sing'.
" I coudln't talk to you because my cell phone was being serviced." This sentence is the past continuous passive of the verb 'service'. It means the same thing as this past continuous active sentence: I couldn't talk to you because someone was servicing (was repairing) my phone.
"I couldn't talk to you because my cell phone was in service." This sentence doesn't make much sense to me. If a phone is "in service" that means it works or is functional. In other words, it is possible to use the phone. |
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Yankee I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 16 Apr 2006 Posts: 8265 Location: USA
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#3 (permalink) Tue Jul 17, 2007 18:17 pm passive continuous sentences |
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peace yankee
im very thankful to you for helping me out with it, now could you help me a little bit more on english pronunciation, i admit that i can speak english with both the american and british accent but the problem with me is i make mistake while pronouncing some words. for instance: diversification- i pronounce as die-versifi-cation while it should be d-versifi-cation.
please enlighten me |
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Prodigy New Member
Joined: 13 Jul 2007 Posts: 7
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#4 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 8:07 am passive continuous sentences |
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| prodigy wrote: | peace
i would be very glad if im helped to understand what passive continous is?
what is the difference if i write " i coudlnt talk to you as my cell phone was being serviced" and "i couldnt talk to you because my cell phone was in service"
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Thee is no difference between them.  |
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Harry Smiith I'm here quite often ;-)
Joined: 15 Jul 2007 Posts: 112 Location: Moscow, Russia
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#5 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 11:52 am passive continuous sentences |
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Hi Harry
There is quite a lot of difference between the two sentences.
First, "was being serviced" is roughly the opposite of "was in service".
Second, if your comment was intended only as a comment about the difference between "as" and "because", keep in mind that it is possible to interpret "as" two different ways in the first sentence: - while/during the time that - because
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..................................... Hi Prodigy
I'm not sure how to interpret your description of the way you pronounce the word "diversification", but it seems that you are telling me that your pronunciation of this word is closer to the American pronunciation than to the British pronunciation. Using the American pronunciation is not a problem. . |
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Yankee I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 16 Apr 2006 Posts: 8265 Location: USA
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#6 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 12:16 pm passive continuous sentences |
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| Yankee wrote: | Hi Harry
There is quite a lot of difference between the two sentences.
First, "was being serviced" is roughly the opposite of "was in service".
Second, if your comment was intended only as a comment about the difference between "as" and "because", keep in mind that it is possible to interpret "as" two different ways in the first sentence: - while/during the time that - because
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Do you really think "was being serviced" is opposite to "was in service"? Can you give an example?  |
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Harry Smiith I'm here quite often ;-)
Joined: 15 Jul 2007 Posts: 112 Location: Moscow, Russia
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#7 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 12:27 pm passive continuous sentences |
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Hi, Harry Smiith
Well, if something is in service, it works If something is being servised it is temporary unavailable (due to the "service operations")
See?
PS: I think your russian is more harm than good to you here. In russian you can say "В сервисе" with the meaning opposite to in service |
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Lost_Soul I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 15 Sep 2006 Posts: 1861 Location: South Park, Colorado, USA
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#8 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 12:32 pm passive continuous sentences |
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Hi Harry
"Was being serviced" basically means "was being repaired/maintained". "Was in service" can often be reworded as "was being used" (in the sense of "was functional and provided a service").
I googled "was in service" and found these examples for you:
- Airtime is calculated using data from those months in which the telephone was in service for the full month. (i.e. was functional/was in use/was usable)
- Neither telephone was in service (i.e. neither telephone worked)
- The third mast was transformed into an AM transmitter and was in service until 1957. (i.e. was in use and functional)
- It was in service for almost twenty years. (i.e. It was functional and used for almost 20 years.)
- The car was in service in the Pyr?n?es C?te d’Argent Express for one year.
- This truck was in service as a reserve ladder truck until replaced in 1990.
This is why I wrote in my first post that Prodigy's second sentence didn't make much sense to me. It's not logical to say that "The reason I couldn't phone you is that the phone was functional." That doesn't make sense. . |
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Yankee I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 16 Apr 2006 Posts: 8265 Location: USA
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#9 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 14:04 pm passive continuous sentences |
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| Yankee wrote: | Hi Harry
"Was being serviced" basically means "was being repaired/maintained". "Was in service" can often be reworded as "was being used" (in the sense of "was functional and provided a service").
I googled "was in service" and found these examples for you:
- Airtime is calculated using data from those months in which the telephone was in service for the full month. (i.e. was functional/was in use/was usable)
- Neither telephone was in service (i.e. neither telephone worked)
- The third mast was transformed into an AM transmitter and was in service until 1957. (i.e. was in use and functional)
- It was in service for almost twenty years. (i.e. It was functional and used for almost 20 years.)
- The car was in service in the Pyr?n?es C?te d’Argent Express for one year.
- This truck was in service as a reserve ladder truck until replaced in 1990.
This is why I wrote in my first post that Prodigy's second sentence didn't make much sense to me. It's not logical to say that "The reason I couldn't phone you is that the phone was functional." That doesn't make sense. . |
I agrre that "was in service" means "was in use". I just can't understand why "was being serviced" and "was in service" are opposites. They are different but not opposites. And why I said there is no difference. Because in both cases he couldn't call.  |
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Harry Smiith I'm here quite often ;-)
Joined: 15 Jul 2007 Posts: 112 Location: Moscow, Russia
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#10 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 15:16 pm passive continuous sentences |
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Hi,
Perhaps you could put the two contenders in one sentence: The bus was not in service because it was being serviced.
Alan _________________ English as a Second Language You can read my ESL story Well, Hello! |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 9124 Location: UK
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#11 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 16:13 pm passive continuous sentences |
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Good one, Alan.
And here's one more try:
- A bus that is being serviced cannot be used for its intended purpose.
- A bus that is in service can be used for its intended purpose.
Trust me, Harry. The meanings are very different. They are so different that they might be seen as opposites -- as I've attempted to illustrate above. . |
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Yankee I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 16 Apr 2006 Posts: 8265 Location: USA
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#12 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 16:48 pm passive continuous sentences |
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| Yankee wrote: | Good one, Alan.
And here's one more try:
- A bus that is being serviced generally cannot be used for its intended purpose.
- A bus that is in service can be used for its intended purpose.
Trust me, Harry. The meanings are very different. They are so different that they might be seen as opposites -- as I've attempted to illustrate above. . |
Ok! A very strange thing is happening in the world of English. I agree with you, but you don't want to understand what I mean. If the bus isn't in service it means that it is being serviced. It's what you say. And I say if the bus isn't in service it can just be in the garage and not being serviced. Are they opposites or not in this case? |
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Harry Smiith I'm here quite often ;-)
Joined: 15 Jul 2007 Posts: 112 Location: Moscow, Russia
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#13 (permalink) Wed Jul 18, 2007 17:36 pm passive continuous sentences |
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| Harry Smiith wrote: | | ...but you don't want to understand what I mean. | That isn't true, Harry. I would like to understand what you mean, but what you've written suggests to me that you don't really understand the difference between the two phrases yet.
| Harry Smiith wrote: | | If the bus isn't in service it means that it is being serviced. It's what you say. | No, Harry, that's not what I said. Those are your words, not mine. Would you say an antonym of 'black' is 'white'? Most people would see those words as opposites. However, just because something is not black, that does not automatically mean that it is white.
| Harry Smiith wrote: | | And I say if the bus isn't in service it can just be in the garage and not being serviced. | Just out of curiosity, do you mean in a parking garage or in a service station?
Is your main stumbling block possibly the fact that I used the words 'roughly opposite'? Don't my last examples ('can be used...' and 'cannot be used...') qualify pretty well as opposite ideas? . |
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Yankee I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 16 Apr 2006 Posts: 8265 Location: USA
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#14 (permalink) Thu Jul 19, 2007 8:26 am passive continuous sentences |
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| Yankee wrote: | | Harry Smiith wrote: | | ...but you don't want to understand what I mean. | That isn't true, Harry. I would like to understand what you mean, but what you've written suggests to me that you don't really understand the difference between the two phrases yet.
| Harry Smiith wrote: | | If the bus isn't in service it means that it is being serviced. It's what you say. | No, Harry, that's not what I said. Those are your words, not mine. Would you say an antonym of 'black' is 'white'? Most people would see those words as opposites. However, just because something is not black, that does not automatically mean that it is white.
| Harry Smiith wrote: | | And I say if the bus isn't in service it can just be in the garage and not being serviced. | Just out of curiosity, do you mean in a parking garage or in a service station?
Is your main stumbling block possibly the fact that I used the words 'roughly opposite'? Don't my last examples ('can be used...' and 'cannot be used...') qualify pretty well as opposite ideas? . |
I mean't the parking garage, of course. Coming back to my first post where I said there was no difference I actually meant that the telephone couldn't be used for conversation in both cases. That's all. I have nothing else to add. |
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Harry Smiith I'm here quite often ;-)
Joined: 15 Jul 2007 Posts: 112 Location: Moscow, Russia
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#15 (permalink) Thu Jul 19, 2007 8:33 am passive continuous sentences |
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| Quote: | | the telephone couldn't be used for conversation in both cases. |
Hi, Harry
I think you're a bit in error... if the telephone was in service then it could be used (because it was in service) (Or I'm nuts ) |
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Lost_Soul I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 15 Sep 2006 Posts: 1861 Location: South Park, Colorado, USA
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