When Not To Bypass Passive Voice
First District Illinois Appellate Court Justice Michael B. Hyman says this about the passive voice in his Judging Your Writing column in the May Illinois Bar Journal: “An abundance of passive sentences tends to force the reader to work harder to understand what is being said. Think statutes, rules, and regulations. They usually read as if composed by a committee of theoretical physicists whose native tongue is German. Yet, while junior to active, passive has an indispensable role in writing that essentially goes unnoticed.”
Read on for Justice Hyman’s many examples of the passive voice’s underestimated value.
Read "When Not To Bypass Passive Voice" in the IBJ.
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