Faire – Causative Construction

Construction causative

French causative
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The causative is a grammatical construction with a lazy subject who, rather than performing some action himself, is making someone or something else do it. The causative may be called le causatif, la construction causative, la situation causative, or la structure causative in French, and is equivalent to "make something happen" or "have something done."

Constructing the causative

The French causative is formed with three to four components:

  1. Faire conjugated according to the subject
  2. Action verb in the infinitive
  3. Agent and/or Recipient

 
Which leads to three possible constructions:

Agent only

Subject + faire + infinitive + agent (direct object)* = the subject is making the agent do something.

Je fais étudier mes enfants chaque soir.   I make my kids study every night.
Il a fait aboyer le chien.   He made the dog bark.
Nous allons faire travailler Céline.   We’re going to make Céline work.

Recipient only

Subject + faire + infinitive + recipient (direct object) = the subject is making something happen, having something done to the recipient.

Je fais tondre le gazon le samedi.   I have the lawn mowed on Saturdays.
Il a fait dénicher la source de ces infos.   He had the source of that information tracked down.
Nous allons faire garder les enfants.   We’re going to have the kids babysat, have someone babysit the kids.

Agent and Recipient

Subject + faire + infinitive + recipient + par or à* + agent (indirect object) = the subject is making the agent do something to the recipient.

Je fais tondre le gazon par / à mon fils.   I have my son mow the lawn.
Il a fait dénicher la source par / à Pierrette.   He had Pierrette track down the source.
Nous allons faire garder les enfants par / à Céline.   We’re going to make Céline babysit the kids.

 The infinitive can be faire, which leads to odd-sounding but perfectly correct and usable sentences like

Je fais faire ses devoirs par / à Jean.   I make Jean do his homework.
Il a fait faire une copie du document.   He had a copy of the document made.
Nous allons faire faire des vêtements.   We’re going to have some clothes made.

 * Only the third construction includes a preposition in front of the agent; that is, only when there is both an agent and a recipient. The preposition lets you know which person is the agent and which is the recipient.

 Compare

Agent   J’ai fait sortir Jacques.   I made Jacques go out.
Recipient   J’ai fait sortir les valises.   I had the suitcases taken out.
A + R   J’ai fait sortir les valises par / à Jacques.   I had Jacques take the suitcases out.

Learn more

  1. Introduction to the causative
  2. Se faire – Reflexive causative
  3. Direct objects and agreement with the causative

 Related lessons

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French causative - Faire + infinitive

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2 Responses

  1. mmeb 5 May 2015 / 13:43

    Une explication compréhensive et formidable! Merci mille fois!

  2. quacking 2 May 2015 / 19:09

    Super Laura, comme d’habitude!

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