The Passive Voice Verb: A Selected, Annotated Bibliography — Part I

Thomas L. Warren Oklahoma State University Oklahoma City

Abstract

Various style manuals, advice to authors, and textbooks on writing stress that writers should prefer the active voice of the verb and avoid the passive form. The following bibliography brings together references to the passive voice of the verb from linguists, grammarians, and researchers of the use of passive voice verbs; comments from technical writing textbooks; comments from books on language; comments from style manuals; and references from various other sources. The annotations summarize the principal points the article makes about passive voice verbs (abstracts provided by the authors of the articles are marked with an asterisk (*)). Part I covers materials from linguists while Part II, to be published in the next issue, lists references in technical writing textbooks, a selection of general books on language, style manuals and author's guides, and various other sources.

Journal
Journal of Technical Writing and Communication
Published
1981-07-01
DOI
10.2190/4ydt-jchn-xjl0-hah5
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Cited by in this index (1)

  1. Journal of Business and Technical Communication

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