Language/French/Grammar/Problems-with-passive-different-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'.