ထောက်ပြတာ မှန်တယ် ဒီစာကြောင်း ၂ ကြောင်း အဓိပ္ပါယ်တူဖို့ ဆိုရင် s မထည့်ရပါဘူး။ edit အမှားပါသွားပါတယ်။ အကယ်၍ s ထည့်ရင် ၂ ကြောင်းစလုံး ထည့်ပေးရပါမယ်။ Singular: "The game had been won." Plural: "The games had been won." The word "game" or "games" should match the context. If you’re referring to a single game, use "game." If you’re referring to multiple games, use "games."
is က present Tense ပစ္စုပန် ကာလ မှာသုံးတယ် was က Past Tense အတိတ်ကာလ မှာသုံးပါတယ်။ 1. "Is": Present Tense: "Is" is used to describe something that is currently true or happening. Subject: It is used with singular subjects (he, she, it, or singular nouns). Examples: "She is happy." "The cat is on the roof." "This book is interesting." 2. "Was": Past Tense: "Was" is used to describe something that was true or happened in the past. Subject: It is used with singular subjects (he, she, it, or singular nouns). Examples: "She was happy yesterday." "The cat was on the roof earlier." "This book was interesting when I read it."
Yes, the preposition "by" is often used to introduce the agent in passive constructions. For example: Active: "The chef cooks the meal." Passive: "The meal is cooked by the chef." If you're referring to pronouns specifically in passive sentences, the same rule applies: Active: "She wrote the book." Passive: "The book was written by her." So, in passive voice, "by" is the correct preposition to use for indicating the doer of the action.