Step 1: Understanding the Concept:
The task is to transform a sentence from the Superlative Degree of comparison to the Positive Degree. The original question uses "Positive voice," which is a common typo for "Positive degree."
- Positive Degree: Makes a simple statement about quality (e.g., clean).
- Comparative Degree: Compares two items (e.g., cleaner than).
- Superlative Degree: Compares three or more items (e.g., the cleanest).
Step 2: Detailed Explanation:
The original sentence, "Bangalore is the cleanest of Indian towns," is in the Superlative Degree. It means that among all Indian towns, Bangalore is at the top in terms of cleanliness.
To change this to the Positive Degree, we need to express the same idea without using a comparative or superlative adjective. The standard structure for converting from superlative to positive is to start with "No other...".
The structure is: No other + [singular noun] + ... + is + as/so + [positive adjective] + as + [subject].
Applying this structure:
1. Start with "No other".
2. The noun is "Indian town" (in singular form).
3. The verb is "is".
4. Use the construction "as ... as" with the positive form of the adjective, which is "clean".
5. The subject being compared is "Bangalore".
This gives us: No other Indian town is as clean as Bangalore.
Step 3: Final Answer:
The sentence transformed into the Positive Degree is: No other Indian town is as clean as Bangalore.