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Passive Voice in German

  Tags: Passive | German
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Bilingual Heptaglot
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 Message 9 of 16
18 March 2012 at 9:16pm | IP Logged 
Well, it depends because there are several unrelated circumstances that may cause "es" to be there.

If I assume right and you are talking about the passive voice use of "es", as you probably know you can't turn a dative object to a passive subject, it's not really possible (whereas you can turn an accusative to a passive subject), example:

Du siehst mich.
Ich werde von dir gesehen.

What was the accusative in the active sentence (" you see me" became the subject in the passive ("I am seen").

You can't do this with a dative object.

Du hilfst mir.
Ich werde von dir geholfen *WRONG*

The dative in the active voice (mir) MUST remain dative in the passive voice, thus:

Mir wird von dir geholfen.

Since this last passive sentence has no explicit grammatical subject ("mir" is dative and "von dir" is an adverbial phrase), one can if they wish use "es" as a dummy subject:

Es wird mir von dir geholfen.

This "es" is understood by natives without having to be written. This becomes clear in the following situation:

Wir helfen den Armen. (active)
Den Armen wird von uns geholfen.

Notice the verb is still "wird". At first you may think that is wrong since "Den Armen" is a plural *subject*, but notice the definite Article, it's in the dative!! Remember, a dative active object remains dative in the passive. Thus "Den Armen" is NOT the grammatical subject of that sentence! (that is interference from English via word order which makes us think it is a subject because it begins the sentence). An implicit "es" is the understood grammatical subject. Notice:

Es wird den Armen von uns geholfen.

Now "wird" makes sense because it is conjugated for the "es" (whether its written or not). This is all somewhat complicated I know, I still don't really fully understand it 100%, because it deals with very fundamental issues of transitivity/intransitivity in languages and how they grammaticaly indicate or treat these features. I understand the mechanics and even some of the underlying reasons (you have to read up on language alignment and things like nominative/accusative vs ergative/absolutive to start catching a glimpse as to the why of these verbal rules), but it is still a complicated subject for me to attempt to elucidate to others.
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LebensForm
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 Message 10 of 16
18 March 2012 at 10:13pm | IP Logged 
Your example was very helpful xD. I do understand that if it is in the dative in the active, must remain in the dative for the passive. I know it is not the best to try to translate directly from German, but could a somewhat awkward sounding equivalent be, it is the poor being helped by us?, for your last sentence.

But yes, you did help clear that up!

Edited by LebensForm on 18 March 2012 at 10:14pm

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 Message 11 of 16
18 March 2012 at 10:46pm | IP Logged 
I have thought about that kind of translation before, I guess it is plausible, but I'm not sure if it is analogous, as English no longer has verbs which only take objects in a morphological certain case.

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Sunja
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 Message 12 of 16
20 March 2012 at 8:57pm | IP Logged 
this is a bit advanced but here's some sentences to help illustrate when to use "es":

"es" acts as subject in passive sentences when (1) the subject has no definite article,

Bottles were thrown --) Es wurden Flaschen geworfen. ("Flaschen" is an unspecified amount and has no definite article)

or (2) there is no "real" subject,

One speaks, of course, a lot about the weather while hiking
Man spricht auf Wanderungen natürlich viel über das Wetter.
(active)

Es wird auf Wanderungen natürlich viel über das Wetter gesprochen (passive with "es")

BUT I've learned that it's best to use another part of the sentence at the beginning (when possible) and not use "es":

Auf Wanderungen wird natürlich viel über das Wetter gesprochen. (passive without "es")

German passive sentence structure is a lot more flexible than English. Here the adverbial clause goes in the first position. Luckily the helping verb (wird) is always second!

edit: another possibilty for that sentence could be:
Natürlich wird auf Wanderungen viel über das Wetter gesprochen either way, you avoid the "es".


Edited by Sunja on 20 March 2012 at 8:59pm

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 Message 13 of 16
20 March 2012 at 11:04pm | IP Logged 
Yup, that is the impersonal use of the passive. It is useful when you need to emphasize the activity the verb describes. In your example, the emphasis is on the fact throwing of bottles was taking place, and the agents are of course uknwown or not important.

And yes, when the impersonal "es" is in a sentece with verb modifiers it is ommited.

I just need to apply these advanced features in my fluent speech, still not there. :)

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Aporia
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 Message 14 of 16
23 March 2012 at 11:19pm | IP Logged 
Another way the dummy "es" is used is with instransitive verbs. In English it is improper to say "it was walked", but in German it is perfectly correct.
For Example:
Es wird auf der Party viel getanzt.
lit. "It is much danced at the party."
or "There is a lot of dancing at the party."
I suppose it can be considered similar to "es gibt".
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Sunja
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 Message 15 of 16
24 March 2012 at 6:58pm | IP Logged 
LebensForm wrote:
Thanks all, just wanted to make sure Sein was always the auxilliary verb, I just could not think of that word at the time. ..


"Sein" is the auxilliary verb for the "Zustandspassiv".

Active: Er verkauft das Haus   Passive: Das Haus ist verkauft
A: Er verkaufte das Haus       P: Das Haus war verkauft
A: Er hat das Haus verkauft    P: Das Haus ist verkauft gewesen
A: Er hatte das Haus verkauft P: Das Haus war verkauft gewesen
A: Er wird das Haus verkaufen P: Das Haus wird verkauft sein

It's called the "false passive" in English, and for sentences like "Das Haus wird verkauft sein", English speakers call "verkauft sein" a predicate adjective (Prädikatadjektiv), which is actually pretty interesting... but really confusing, I think.


"werden" is the auxiliary verb for the "Vorgangspassiv".

A: Er verkauft das Haus        P: Das Haus wird verkauft
A: Er verkaufte das Haus       P: Das Haus wurde verkauft
A: Er hat das Haus verkauft    P: Das Haus ist verkauft worden
A: Er hatte das Haus verkauft P: Das Haus war verkauft worden
A: Er wird das Haus verkaufen P: Das Haus wird verkauft werden


So, the difference is that "Vorgangspassiv" (-werden-) describes the actual process of something being done to the the house and "Zustandspassiv" (-sein-) describes the condition of the house after something was already done to it -- whether it's bought, sold, destroyed or renovated. Verbs for which there can be nobody doing the action can't be passive. For example, "The house is collapsed" has no agent or person doing the action so it can't be passive.



Edited by Sunja on 24 March 2012 at 7:01pm

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Sunja
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 Message 16 of 16
24 March 2012 at 7:06pm | IP Logged 
Aporia wrote:
Another way the dummy "es" is used is with instransitive verbs. In English it is improper to say "it was walked", but in German it is perfectly correct.
For Example:
Es wird auf der Party viel getanzt.
lit. "It is much danced at the party."
or "There is a lot of dancing at the party."
I suppose it can be considered similar to "es gibt".


I like "dummy es"!

And I think this is true. Short sentences (als einleitender Satz) with intransitive verbs is where it sounds the best.

It's also really common for "es" to be replaced ..

Jetzt wird getanzt! Bald wird getanzt!

Which is either a statement (get ready, there's gonna be some dancing) or a call to act like I'd say "jetzt wird (aber) geschlafen" to my kids when it's 10 and they're still not asleep. It means "okay now it's time to sleep -- so do it!" (lol)


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