The Causative: Have / Get Something Done
Use have or get + object + past participle to say you arranged for someone else to do something for you. When you say "I had my hair cut," a hairdresser did the cutting, not you, and that one extra past participle changes everything: "I cut my hair" means you did it yourself. The pattern is perfect for talking about services and arrangements, as in "We're getting the kitchen painted" and "She had her passport renewed." Keep the past participle (cut, painted, renewed), not the base verb or an -ing form, and the focus stays on the result, not the person doing the work.
Examples
- I had my hair cut. a hairdresser cut the speaker's hair
- We're getting the kitchen painted. someone is painting the kitchen for us
- She had her passport renewed. the authorities renewed her passport for her
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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Say I cut my hair and you just told everyone you grabbed the scissors yourself. So how do you say a barber did it? You need the causative.
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The causative lets you say you arranged for someone else to do a job for you. The focus is the service, not who performed it.
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Compare the two. I cut my hair — you did it. I had my hair cut — someone cut it for you. Same haircut, very different meaning.
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Here's the core pattern in action. I had my hair cut. Have, then the object, then the past participle — cut, not cutting.
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Get works the same way and sounds a bit more casual. We're getting the kitchen painted. Someone is painting it for us — we just arranged it.
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It works in any tense — just change the form of have or get. She had her passport renewed. The authorities renewed it for her.
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One more, in the future. I'm going to have my car repaired. A mechanic will do the work; you're the one arranging it.
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Biggest trap: using the base verb instead of the past participle. It's never cutting — it's cut.
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And don't fall back on the active form when you didn't do the job. If a barber cut it, I cut my hair is simply wrong.
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So: have or get, plus the object, plus the past participle. It's how you talk about haircuts, repairs and deliveries — naturally.