FACTITIVE - définition. Qu'est-ce que FACTITIVE
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est FACTITIVE - définition

ASPECT OF VERB GRAMMAR
Causal-final case; Causal-final form; Causative voice; Causal case; Causative case; Causative verb; Factitive; Causativity

Factitive         
·adj Causing; causative.
II. Factitive ·adj Pertaining to that relation which is proper when the act, as of a transitive verb, is not merely received by an object, but produces some change in the object, as when we say, He made the water wine.
factitive         
['fakt?t?v]
¦ adjective Linguistics denoting a verb having a sense of causing a result and taking a complement as well as an object, as in he appointed me captain.
Origin
C19: from mod. L. factitivus, formed irregularly from L. factitare, frequentative of facere 'do, make'.
causative         
Causative factors are ones which are responsible for causing something. (FORMAL)
Both nicotine and carbon monoxide inhaled with cigarette smoking have been incriminated as causative factors.
ADJ: ADJ n

Wikipédia

Causative

In linguistics, a causative (abbreviated CAUS) is a valency-increasing operation that indicates that a subject either causes someone or something else to do or be something or causes a change in state of a non-volitional event. Normally, it brings in a new argument (the causer), A, into a transitive clause, with the original subject S becoming the object O.

All languages have ways to express causation but differ in the means. Most, if not all, languages have specific or lexical causative forms (such as English riseraise, lielay, sitset). Some languages also have morphological devices (such as inflection) that change verbs into their causative forms or change adjectives into verbs of becoming. Other languages employ periphrasis, with control verbs, idiomatic expressions or auxiliary verbs. There tends to be a link between how "compact" a causative device is and its semantic meaning.

The normal English causative verb or control verb used in periphrasis is make rather than cause. Linguistic terms are traditionally given names with a Romance root, which has led some to believe that cause is more prototypical. While cause is a causative, it carries some additional meaning (it implies direct causation) and is less common than make. Also, while most other English causative verbs require a to complement clause (as in “My mom caused me to eat broccoli"), make does not require one ("My mom made me eat broccoli"), at least when it is not being used in the passive voice.: 36–7