passive - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English passyf, passyve, from Middle French, French passif, from Latin passivus (“serving to express the suffering of an action; in late Latin literally capable of suffering or feeling”), from passus, past participle of pati (“to suffer”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *peh₁- (“to hurt”); compare patient.
passive (comparative more passive, superlative most passive)
Examples (being in the passive voice) |
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The passive form of “A meteorite hit the earth” is “The earth was hit by a meteorite.” |
- Being subjected to an action without producing a reaction.
- Taking no action.
He remained passive during the protest.
- (grammar) Being in the passive voice.
- (psychology) Being inactive and submissive in a relationship, especially in a sexual one.
- (finance) Not participating in management.
- (aviation) Without motive power.
a passive balloon
a passive aeroplane
passive flight, such as gliding and soaring
- (electronics) Of a component: that consumes but does not produce energy, or is incapable of power gain.
- (passive provision) Where allowance is made for a possible future event.
- Antonym: active
2021 May 5, Paul Clifton, “Network News: Heathrow Western Rail Access scheme 'on hold'”, in RAIL, number 930, page 26:
There would be a shuttle service of four trains an hour from Reading, where the rebuilt station also has passive provision for the trains.
- activo-passive
- endopassive
- exopassive
- long passive
- neutropassive
- passive-aggressive
- passive aggressor
- passive armour
- passive defense
- passive-dependent
- passive euthanasia
- passive gravitational mass
- passive immunity
- passive income
- passive investor
- passive iron
- passive learning
- passively
- passive matrix
- passiveness
- passive participle
- passive photolocation
- passive radar
- passive resistance
- passive resister
- passive restraint
- passive smoke
- passive smoker
- passive smoking
- passive solar
- passive vape
- passive vaper
- passive vaping
- passive vaporing
- passive vapouring
- passive vocabulary
- passive voice
- passivity
- passivization
- passivize
not active, but acted upon
- Belarusian: пасы́ўны (pasýŭny)
- Bulgarian: паси́вен (bg) (pasíven)
- Catalan: passiu (ca)
- Chinese:
- Czech: pasivní (cs)
- Dutch: passief (nl)
- Estonian: loid
- Finnish: passiivinen (fi)
- French: passif (fr)
- Georgian: please add this translation if you can
- German: passiv (de)
- Greek:
- Ancient: παθητικός (pathētikós)
- Hindi: निष्क्रिय (hi) (niṣkriya)
- Hungarian: passzív (hu)
- Italian: passivo (it)
- Japanese: 受動的 (ja) (じゅどうてき, judōteki), 受け身 (うけみ, ukemi)
- Lithuanian: pasyvus
- Middle English: passyf
- Old English: þrowiendlīċ
- Persian: منفعل (fa) (monfa'el), پاسیو (fa) (pâsiv)
- Polish: bierny (pl)
- Portuguese: passivo (pt)
- Romanian: pasiv (ro)
- Russian: пасси́вный (ru) (passívnyj)
- Slovak: pasívny
- Spanish: pasivo (es)
- Swedish: passiv (sv)
- Ukrainian: паси́вний (uk) (pasývnyj)
- Vietnamese: bị động (vi)
taking no action
- Bulgarian: бездеен (bg) (bezdeen)
- Dutch: passief (nl)
- Estonian: loid
- Finnish: passiivinen (fi)
- German: passiv (de)
- Irish: fulangach
- Middle English: passyf
- Norwegian: passiv (no)
- Persian: پاسیو (fa) (pâsiv)
- Polish: bierny (pl)
- Portuguese: passivo (pt)
- Russian: пасси́вный (ru) (passívnyj), безде́ятельный (ru) (bezdéjatelʹnyj)
- Slovak: pasívny, nečinný
- Swedish: passiv (sv)
- Vietnamese: thụ động (vi)
grammar: being in the passive voice
- Albanian: pësor (sq)
- Arabic: مَبْنِيٌّ لِلْمَجْهُول (mabniyyun lilmajhūl)
- Armenian: կրավորական (hy) (kravorakan)
- Azerbaijani: məchul (az)
- Belarusian: зале́жны (zaljéžny), пасы́ўны (pasýŭny)
- Bulgarian: страда́телен (bg) (stradátelen), паси́вен (bg) (pasíven)
- Chinese:
- Czech: trpný
- Danish: passiv
- Dutch: lijdend (nl), lijdelijk (nl), passief (nl)
- Estonian: passiiv
- Finnish: passiivinen (fi), passiivimuotoinen
- French: passif (fr)
- German: leidend (de), leidentlich, passiv (de), passivisch (de)
- Greek: παθητική (el) (pathitikí)
- Ancient: παθητικός (pathētikós)
- Hungarian: szenvedő (hu)
- Irish: céasta
- Italian: passivo (it)
- Japanese: 受動態 (ja) (じゅどうたい, judōtai)
- Kannada: ಕರ್ಮಣಿ (karmaṇi)
- Korean: 수동태 (ko) (sudongtae)
- Macedonian: пасивен (pasiven)
- Middle English: passyf
- Norwegian: passiv (no)
- Persian: مجهول (fa) (majhul)
- Polish: bierny (pl)
- Portuguese: passivo (pt)
- Russian: страда́тельный (ru) (stradátelʹnyj), пасси́вный (ru) (passívnyj)
- Scottish Gaelic: fulangach
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Slovak: trpný
- Slovene: trpen, pasiven
- Swedish: passiv (sv)
- Turkish: edilgen (tr), pasif (tr)
- Ukrainian: паси́вний (uk) (pasývnyj)
- Vietnamese: bị động (vi)
finance: not bearing interest
Translations to be checked
passive (plural passives)
- (grammar) The passive voice of verbs.
- (grammar) A form of a verb that is in the passive voice.
- (marketing) A customer who is satisfied with a product or service, but not keen enough to promote it by word of mouth.
2014, Roy Barnes, Bob Kelleher, Customer Experience For Dummies, page 266:
If you want to improve your organization's NPS, you need to follow up with your detractors, passives, and promoters to understand why they answered your question as they did and what you can do better in the future.
- (electronics) Any component that consumes but does not produce energy, or is incapable of power gain.
2001, The Virginia Engineer, volume 50, page 20:
Reductions In Both Size And Weight Offered By Integrated Passives
You may not know it yet, but if you're like most consumers, you want integrated passives.
2010, Sridhar Canumalla, Puligandla Viswanadham, Portable Consumer Electronics: Packaging, Materials, and Reliability:
The components include active devices such as logic, memory, processors, etc.; passives such as capacitors, resistors, crystal oscillators, inductances, etc.; […]
- (gaming) Short for passive attack.
- A thing whose worth decreases with time.
- “passive”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “passive”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
passive
passive
- inflection of passiver:
passive
- inflection of passiv:
passive
From passīvus + -ē, ultimately from patior.
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /pasˈsiː.u̯eː/, [päs̠ˈs̠iːu̯eː]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /pasˈsi.ve/, [päsˈsiːve]
passīvē (not comparable)
passive
- Alternative form of passyf
passive
- Alternative form of passyf