Passive Voice: The windows have been washed. Active Voice: John washed the windows. Sally washed the windows. Sally and John washed the windows. They washed the windows. He washed the windows. She washed the windows. Or... John had washed the windows. etc.
washed the windows had been
To change "the windows had been washed" into passive voice, you would actually keep it as is, since it is already in passive voice. In this construction, the subject "the windows" receives the action of being washed, and the focus is on the action rather than who performed it. If you wanted to express it in active voice, you could say, "Someone had washed the windows."
It is in the active voice.
passive active A+
Active Voice Building was created in 1962.
The two voices of a verb are active voice and passive voice. In active voice, the subject of the sentence performs the action, while in passive voice, the subject receives the action.
"The policeman chased after Fred" is active voice.
The active voice sentence is "The tornado destroyed the home." Subject + Verb + Object = Active voice. Object + A "be" verb (am, is, are, was, were, been) + Past participle + Subject = Passive voice.
I broke my leg. (active voice) My leg is broken. (passive voice) Active voice vs. Passive voice.
The voice of the verb in the sentence is active voice. In active voice, the subject of the sentence performs the action.
The verb is in the active voice.