se faire

  • se faire

    The French verb se faire is versatile and appears in many different meanings depending on context. It can mean “to become,” “to get,” “to have something done,” or “to make oneself.” The reflexive form se faire is more common than the non-reflexive faire in certain contexts. Understanding which meaning applies requires paying attention to what…

  • se faire

    Se faire is a pronominal construction built on the verb faire. It is extremely frequent in modern French and covers several core functions: causing something to happen to oneself, having something done by someone else, undergoing an event, and forming many fixed idiomatic expressions. Basic structure Se faire agrees with the subject and is followed…

  • se faire

    Se faire is a pronominal construction built on the verb faire. Its core function is to express that the subject causes an action to happen to themselves, or that something happens to the subject as a result of an external agent. In many contexts, English uses a passive construction, a causative structure, or an idiomatic…