Difference between revisions of "Causative form"

From Korean Wiki Project
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(18 intermediate revisions by one user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}
 +
If you are looking for the complete list of 이, 히, 리, 기, 우, 구, 추 causative verbs,
 +
look up the word "사동사" in Naver Korean-Korean Dictionary, and see the 뜻풀이 section.
 +
There are a total of 364 verbs in Standard Korean Dictionary (표준국어대사전).
 +
 
A causative form, in linguistics, (a) is an expression of an agent causing or forcing a patient to perform an action or to be in a certain condition--salient cause, (b) is an expression of a patient involves in a non-volitional event that registers the changes of its state--salient effect, (c) is an expression of a grammatical modality in perfective (sequential) or subjenctive (hypothetical) or realis (non-hypothetical) state--perceptual salient. In Korean, this form is called 사동.
 
A causative form, in linguistics, (a) is an expression of an agent causing or forcing a patient to perform an action or to be in a certain condition--salient cause, (b) is an expression of a patient involves in a non-volitional event that registers the changes of its state--salient effect, (c) is an expression of a grammatical modality in perfective (sequential) or subjenctive (hypothetical) or realis (non-hypothetical) state--perceptual salient. In Korean, this form is called 사동.
  
The Korean passive and causative conjugations pose many confusing aspects, and most Korean materials don't even teach this part properly. This grammar part may even be hard for some native Korean speakers. For example, 굽다 has two meanings and their conjugational forms are completely different.
+
See [[Passive form]] for conjugations of the causative form.
*굽다1 : bend
+
*굽어지다 : to (naturally) become bent : (-어지다 is always passive. in this case, 굽다 follows the regular conjugation rule)
+
*굽히다 : to make something become bent , to bend something : (this -히 is causative)
+
*굽혀지다 : to become bent by someone : (causative -히 + passive -어지다)
+
*굽다2 : to bake
+
*구워지다 : to be baked : (-어지다 is always passive. in this case, 굽다 follows the ㅂ irregular conjugation rule)
+
 
+
In the example above, -히 is a causative suffix, but it can be either a passive suffix in many other verbs.
+
*먹다 : to eat
+
*먹히다 : to be eaten : (this -히 is passive)
+
*먹혀지다 : to be eaten : (passive -히 + passive -어지다. this is wrong as it is a double passive)
+
*먹이다 : to make/let someone eat , to feed : (this -이 is causative)
+
*먹여지다 : to be fed : (causative -이 + passive -어지다. this is correct but hardly ever used.)
+
 
+
In some cases, the passive and causative forms are morphologically identical.
+
*보다 : to see
+
*보이다1 : to be seen : (this -이 is passive)
+
*보여지다1 : to be seen : (passive -이 + passive -어지다, this usage is wrong as it is a double passive)
+
*보이다2 : to make/let someone see , to show : (this -이 is causative. to avoid confusion, 보여주다 is used in most cases)
+
*보여지다2 : to be shown : (causative -이 + passive -어지다)
+
 
+
Many verbs have two possible passive forms but only one of them is preferred in most cases. (the less preferred one might even sound unnatural) Some verbs, however, the two passive forms are equally preferred, either one is fine.
+
*믿다 : to believe
+
*믿기다 : to be believed : (this -기 is passive)
+
*믿어지다 : to be believed : (-어지다 is passive)
+
*믿겨지다 : to be believed : (passive -기 + passive -어지다. this is wrong as it is a double passive)
+
*믿게 하다 : to make/let someone believe something : (in this case, -게 하다 is the proper causative)
+
 
+
There are some verbs that even most native Koreans fail to conjugate correctly.
+
*잊다 : to forget
+
*잊히다 : to be forgotten : (passive -히)
+
*잊어지다 : to be forgotten : (passive -어지다, this form is correct but hardly used)
+
*잊혀지다 : to be forgotten : (a double passive using both -히 and -어지다. this is wrong)
+
*잊게 하다 : to make/let someone forget something : (in this case, -게 하다 is the proper causative form)
+
 
+
Some verbs don't allow the passive suffixes at all. These exceptional verbs need special passive forms.
+
*죽다 : to die
+
*죽이다 : to make/let someone die , to kill : (causative -이)
+
*죽임을 당하다 : to be killed : (causative -이 + nominalization -ㅁ + passive -을 당하다)
+
*사망(死亡)하다 : to die : (Sino Korean equivalent)
+
*살해(殺害)하다 : to kill : (Sino Korean equivalent)
+
*살해(殺害)당하다 : to be killed : (Sino Korean equivalent)
+
*살해(殺害)되다 : to be killed : (Sino Korean equivalent)
+
*피살(被殺)되다 : to be killed : (Sino Korean equivalent)
+
 
+
묻다 has three meanings and each of them has different conjugational forms.
+
*묻다1 : to bury : (this verb follows the regular conjugation rule)
+
*묻히다1 : to be buried : (this -히 is passive)
+
*묻어지다 : to be buried : (passive -어지다. this form is not much used)
+
*묻혀지다1 : to be buried : (passive -히 + passive -어지다, this usage is wrong as it is a double passive)
+
*묻게 하다 : to make/let someone bury something : (causative form with -게 하다)
+
*묻다2 : to be smeared : (this verb follows the regular conjugation rule)
+
*묻히다2 : to make/let something become smeared, to smear : (this -히 is causative. note that the previous 묻히다1 is passive)
+
*묻혀지다2 : to become smeared with something by someone : (causative -히 + passive -어지다)
+
*묻다3 : to ask : (this verb does not have a passive form. theoretically, it should be 물어지다 in the passive form but this is not used. so, 물음을 받다 would work as the passive form. 물음 is a noun form of 묻다(to ask), as the object suffix -을/-를 is only attached to nouns. However, 물음을 받다 sounds kind of uncommon. the most frequently used passive form for this verb would be 질문(質問)을 받다, the Sino Korean alternative. this 묻다3 verb follows the ㄷ irregular conjugation rule.)
+
*물어보게 하다 : to make/let someone ask something : (causative form with -게 하다. theoretically, it should be 묻게 하다 but this can be misunderstood as the 묻다1 verb.)
+
 
+
Adjectives can also become passive and causative verbs.
+
*낮다 : be low
+
*낮아지다 : to become low : (passive -아지다)
+
*낮추다 : to make/let something become low , to lower : (this -추 is causative)
+
*낮춰지다 : to become lowered by someone : (causative -추 + passive -어지다)
+
*높다 : be high
+
*높아지다 : to become high : (passive -아지다)
+
*높이다 : to make/let something become high : (this -이 is causative)
+
*높여지다 : passive form of 높이다 : (causative -이 + passive -어지다)
+
 
+
Some causative forms with the -우 suffix are inflected with the vowel ㅣ.
+
*자다 : to sleep
+
*재우다 : to make/let someone sleep : (자 + ㅣ + 우 + 다)
+
*재워지다 : passive form of 재우다 : (causative -우 + passive -어지다)
+
*서다 : to stand
+
*세우다 : to make/let something stand : (서 + ㅣ + 우 + 다)
+
*세워지다 : passive form of 세우다 : (causative -우 + passive -어지다)
+
+
 
+
In short, the conjugation rules for the passive and causative forms follow some patterns, but vary with individual verbs. (most passive verbs take one of -이, -히, -리, -기 or -어/-아지다 or -되다. most causative verbs take one of -이, -히, -리, -기, -우 ,-구, -추 or -시키다 or -게 하다). The four suffixes -이, -히, -리, -기 are particularly tricky as they could be either passive or causative (or sometimes both). If you come across a Korean word you don't know, with one of the four suffixes, you can't really determine whether it is passive or causative unless you look up a Korean dictionary, because those four suffixes arbitrarily work with individual verbs. (say, if you come across an English word you don't know, with "-ed" ending, you can soon figure out that it is a past tense suffix for a verb, but you can't determine the function of the four Korean suffixes without a Korean dictionary) That's why most Korean materials for foreigners overlook or skip or this grammar part. They (those who created the Korean materials for foreigners) often say "Passive form is not much used  in Korean" or "Passive form is not as common as it is in English". The first argument is wrong. Passive form is very common in Korean in fact. The latter argument might be true in many cases but doubtful if the claim is based on any valid statistics. As previously shown, many active voice English expressions should be translated to the passive form in Korean, but it is often ignored. It seems like many Koreans aren't even aware that they are actually speaking in the passive forms. I have never seen someone explaining 믿기지(가) 않다 or 믿어지지(가) 않았다 or 믿겨지지(가) 않다 as the passive form. Most people just explain it as "can't blarblar". That's how you end up thinking the passive form is not common in Korean. Depending on the situation, the passive form in Korean could be is even more common than the passive voice in English. This grammar part is very confusing even for native Korean speakers. Many Koreans are still using double passive words like 잊혀지다, because they misunderstood the -히 suffix as causative. (Try to imagine a word like "forgottened" which has an extra "-ed" suffix. That's what's called the double passive in Korean. In English, somehow the past participles are used for the passive voice but in Korean, past tense has nothing to do with the passive form. They are morphologically completely different.) I think they (those who created the Korean materials for foreigners) are just avoiding some nettlesome parts. Who would want to make their customers freaked out? In practice, each form of every verb should be memorized.
+
 
+
 
   
 
   
 
==Forming causatives ==
 
==Forming causatives ==

Latest revision as of 05:22, 17 February 2022

Construction.png


If you are looking for the complete list of 이, 히, 리, 기, 우, 구, 추 causative verbs, 
look up the word "사동사" in Naver Korean-Korean Dictionary, and see the 뜻풀이 section.
There are a total of 364 verbs in Standard Korean Dictionary (표준국어대사전). 

A causative form, in linguistics, (a) is an expression of an agent causing or forcing a patient to perform an action or to be in a certain condition--salient cause, (b) is an expression of a patient involves in a non-volitional event that registers the changes of its state--salient effect, (c) is an expression of a grammatical modality in perfective (sequential) or subjenctive (hypothetical) or realis (non-hypothetical) state--perceptual salient. In Korean, this form is called 사동.

See Passive form for conjugations of the causative form.

Forming causatives

Explaining the form with subject marker, object marker, etc.

이 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
먹다 (to eat) 먹이다 (to make/let someone eat , to feed)

Active- 나는 김치를 먹는다.(I eat Kimchi)

Causative- 나는 강아지에게 물을 먹인다.(I make my dog drink water)

죽다 (to die) 죽이다 (to make/let someone die , to kill)

Active- 지진 때문에 많은 사람이 죽었다. (Many people died from the earthquake.)

Causative- 그는 사람을 죽였다. (He killed a person.)

붙다 (to stick to) 붙이다 (to make/let something stick to)

Active- 나는 벽에 붙는다. (I stick to the wall.)

Causative- 나는 사진을 벽에 붙인다. (I make a picture stick to the wall.)

끓다 (to boil) 끓이다 (to make/let something boil)

Active- 물은 100℃ 이상에서 끓는다. (Water boils in the temperature of 100℃ and over.)

Causative- 나는 김치찌개를 끓인다. (I make the Kimchi-jjigae boil. / I boil the Kimchi-jjigae.)

보다 (to see, to look, to watch) 보이다 (to make/let someone see , to show)

Active- 나는 영화를 보았다. (I saw a movie.)

Causative- 학생이 내게 사진을 보였다. (A student showed me a photograph.)

속다 (to be fooled, to be deceived) 속이다 (to make/let someone be fooled)

Active- 또다시 일기예보에게 속았다. (I am fooled by the weather forecast again.)

Causative- 절대로 사람을 속이지 마라. (Never deceive a person.)


히 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
익다 익히다
읽다 (to read) 읽히다
입다 (to wear) 입히다
앉다 (to sit) 앉히다
눕다 눕히다
맞다 맞히다


리 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
알다 알리다
울다 울리다
돌다 돌리다
살다 살리다
놀다 놀리다


기 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
벗다 벗기다
신다 신기다
웃다 웃기다
맡다 맡기다
감다 감기다
씻다 씻기다


우 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
깨다 깨우다
서다 세우다
쓰다 씌우다
자다 재우다
타다 태우다


구 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
돋다 돋구다
일다 일구다
달다 달구다
솟다 솟구다


추 Causative verb
Active verb Causative verb Examples
낮다 낮추다
늦다 늦추다
맞다 맞추다
곧다 곧추다

Creating causative form

The causative form can also be created using: See V + 게 하다

See also