Passive Voice (Chart 2)
Specific uses of Passive Voice
- Passive Voice used as impersonal sentences = verbs with to objects: For us, Spaniards it rather odd not to be able to hide the subject using impersonal sentences. It is being shown in Chart 1, how using passive voice you can omit the subject. But, what about what is called in Spanish “passive refleja”? Also, “Impersonals” are simple sentence structures starting with “SE (dice/piensa…)” in Spanish. We can find an equivalent in passive voice sentences whose verb has two objects (direct and indirect)
Structure: Indirect object + passive verb + direct object + etc.
Meaning: These sentences give priority to the person/thing… which receives the
action from the verb. At the same time hides who is responsible of the
action.
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Examples:
Active Voice: Somebody gave the books to the teacher
Passive Voice: The teacher was given the books
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- Verbs/structures with passive meaning or passive structure: Certain actions in English require the verb “to be” or “get”
A) to be born: I was born in March
B) Get: sometimes get is used instead of “be”: He doesn’t
often get to choose first, that’s why he is so happy about it.
C) Get married / get divorced / get dressed: this passive
structure doesn’t have a passive meaning.
D) To borrow: this verb is rather peculiar for Spaniards
because “the lender” is not the subject but the person who is taking the thing
from the lender.
- Causative verbs/structure: In Spanish we distinguish when someone does an action for themselves (so the subject and the recipient of the action are the same) and when somebody else is doing an action promoted by the subject. We just simply use “reflexives pronouns” or “reflexive verbs” in the first case, and omit the reflexive in the second case. In English it is different, “reflexive verbs” don’t exist. Example: I have cut my hair (the subject cut it him/herself)/ I have my hair cut (somebody cut the subjects hair because the subject put the action in motion)
The most common causative verbs structures are:
a) Have/get something
done = have/get + object + past
participle
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Examples:
She always has her food delivered
Object
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b) Have/get someone
do something = have+ agent + base verb
form without to
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Example:
I had the mechanic check
my car
Agent
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