Transformation of Sentences — Advanced Notes

Transformation of Sentences — Advanced Notes

Transformation of Sentences — Advanced Notes

Concise rules & examples for higher-level classes. Use these as classroom notes or quick revision.

1Active ⇄ Passive Voice

  • Rule (Simple present/simple past): Object + am/is/are/was/were + past participle (+ by + subject).
    Use is/are for present; was/were for past. If object is pronoun, use it first (e.g., HeHim).
  • Modal verbs: Object + modal + be + past participle. (e.g., They can finish → It can be finished)
  • Imperatives: Let/Do not forms, use passive: Be + past participle or Let + object + be + V3.
Example:
Active: The students wrote the essay.
Passive: The essay was written by the students.

2Direct ⇄ Indirect Speech (Reported Speech)

  • Backshift of tense: Present → Past, Present Perfect → Past Perfect, Will → Would, Can → Could.
  • Change of pronouns & time words: now→then, today→that day, here→there, this→that.
  • Imperatives: Use asked/ordered/ requested + infinitive (e.g., He said, “Do it.” → He ordered him to do it.)
  • Yes/No questions: Use if/whether + clause.
    Beginner tip: remove question word order.
Example:
Direct: She said, “I am tired.”
Indirect: She said (that) she was tired.

3Affirmative ⇄ Negative

  • Simple present/past: Add do/does/did + not + base verb (I like → I do not like).
  • With auxiliaries/modals: Put not after auxiliary/modal (She has finished → She has not finished).
  • Use contractions: don't/doesn't/didn't, isn't/aren't/wasn't, can't/won't.
Example:
Affirmative: They have solved the problem.
Negative: They have not solved the problem.

4Simple ⇄ Complex Sentences (Use of Clauses)

  • Combine using conjunctions: and, but, or, so → compound sentence.
  • Use subordinate clauses: when, because, if, although, which, who to form complex sentences.
  • Reduce clauses: Remove subject + -ing or to + infinitive when possible (While waiting → Waiting).
Example:
Simple: He was tired. He went to bed early.
Complex: Because he was tired, he went to bed early.

5Degrees of Comparison & Adjective Transformations

  • Positive → Comparative: Add -er or use more for long adjectives (taller / more beautiful).
  • Comparative → Superlative: Add -est or use most (tallest / most interesting).
  • Change structure: As + adj + asNot as + adj + as / Less + adj + than.
Example:
Positive: She is clever.
Comparative: She is cleverer than him.
Superlative: She is the cleverest in the class.

6Conditional Sentences — Transformations

  • Type 0 (General truth): If + present simple, present simple. (If you heat ice, it melts.)
  • Type 1 (Real future): If + present simple, will + base. (If it rains, I will stay home.)
  • Type 2 (Unreal present): If + past simple, would + base. (If I were rich, I would travel.)
  • Type 3 (Past unreal): If + past perfect, would have + past participle. (If you had studied, you would have passed.)

7Interrogative Transformations

  • Yes/No questions: Auxiliary + subject + main verb (Do you like tea?).
  • Wh- questions: Wh-word + auxiliary + subject + verb (Where did she go?).
  • Convert statements: Use appropriate auxiliary (do/does/did/is/are/has/have/will).
Example:
Statement: You are coming tomorrow.
Question: Are you coming tomorrow?

8Noun ⇄ Adjective ⇄ Adverb (Form Changes)

  • Noun → Adjective: add -ful/-less/-ous/-ic or use related adjective (help → helpful).
  • Adjective → Adverb: usually add -ly (quick → quickly). Irregular: good → well.
  • Adjective to noun: use -ness/-ity or abstract form (happy → happiness).

Quick Reference Table — Common Transformations

ChangePatternExample
Active → PassiveO + be + V3 (+ by S)They built the bridge → The bridge was built by them.
Direct → Indirect“S says, \”…\”” → S said (that) …He said, “I am hungry.” → He said (that) he was hungry.
Affirmative → NegativeS + auxiliary + not + VShe likes coffee → She does not like coffee.
Simple → ComplexS1. S2 → S1 + conjunction + S2He was tired. He slept early → Because he was tired, he slept early.
Statement → QuestionAux + S + V?You are ready → Are you ready?

Pro tip: Always spot the subject, verb, and object before transforming — this reduces errors.

Made for teachers & students — concise rules with classroom-friendly examples. Use this as a handout or slide.

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