Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Problems-with-passive-different-direct-objects"

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<div style="font-size:200%"> Problems in the formation of the passive arising from different kinds of direct objects</div>
<div style="font-size:200%">Issues in [[Language/French/Grammar/Active-Voice-and-Passive-Voice|Passive Voice]] resulting from different types of [[Language/French/Grammar/Direct-Object-Complement|direct objects]]</div>
==Definitions Reminders==


===Active Voice & Passive Voice===


→ The active voice presents the subject as the agent of the action.


Most verbs which have a direct object will convert into a passive, but there are limitations to whether the meaning is sensible or not. Aimer can be turned into a sensible passive:
Example:
*Nos amis construisent une maison.
Our friends are building a house.
 
→ By reversal, the passive voice presents the subject as an agent undergoing the action.
 
Example:
*Une maison est construite par nos amis.
A house is built by our friends.
===The Direct Object===
The direct object complement (French: le complément d'objet direct, COD) directly completes the verb without any preposition. The verb used with a COD is a direct transitive verb.
 
To find the COD of a verb, it is most often enough to ask questions:
* Quoi ? (What?)
* Qui ? (Who?)
 
==Convert a verb that has a direct object to the passive voice==
 
The majority of verbs having a direct object can be converted into a passive. However, there are limitations to whether the meaning is sensible or not.  
 
For example, the verb "Aimer" has a direct object and can be turned into a sensible passive:





Revision as of 19:44, 10 December 2021

French-Language-PolyglotClub.png
Issues in Passive Voice resulting from different types of direct objects

Definitions Reminders

Active Voice & Passive Voice

→ The active voice presents the subject as the agent of the action.

Example:

  • Nos amis construisent une maison.

Our friends are building a house.

→ By reversal, the passive voice presents the subject as an agent undergoing the action.

Example:

  • Une maison est construite par nos amis.

A house is built by our friends.

The Direct Object

The direct object complement (French: le complément d'objet direct, COD) directly completes the verb without any preposition. The verb used with a COD is a direct transitive verb.

To find the COD of a verb, it is most often enough to ask questions:

  • Quoi ? (What?)
  • Qui ? (Who?)

Convert a verb that has a direct object to the passive voice

The majority of verbs having a direct object can be converted into a passive. However, there are limitations to whether the meaning is sensible or not.

For example, the verb "Aimer" has a direct object and can be turned into a sensible passive:


  • Juliette aime Georges

Juliette loves George


  • Georges est aimée par Juliette

George is loved by Juliette


but lire produces a less natural sentence:


  • Je lis ce livre

I am reading this book


  • Ce livre est lu par moi (???)

This book is being read by me (???)


Usually passives which make an inanimate direct object a subject and put an animate subject in a par or de phrase are unnatural.


NB: The verb avoir is used in the passive only in the colloquial “J'ai été eu” I have been had' in the sense of 'swindled'.


Other Chapters

Table of Contents

Nouns


Determiners


Personal and impersonal pronouns


Adjectives


Adverbs


Numbers, measurements, time and quantifiers


Verb forms


Verb constructions


Verb and participle agreement


Tense


The subjunctive, modal verbs, exclamatives and imperatives


The infinitive


Prepositions


Question formation


Relative clauses


Negation


Conjunctions and other linking constructions