substitution for “gotten” in causative structure












0














I would like to know whether there is a substitution for "gotten" in the sentence below.





  1. The resulted model is gotten Control Flow Graph (CFG) generator to generate CFG of the program.

  2. Two models are gotten the unit as input to navigate the program.











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  • A got B to generate C?
    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago










  • Try providing another sentence conveying the same meaning so we know what that is supposed to mean. Else it may be treated as "Unclear."
    – Kris
    2 days ago












  • Gotten doesn’t make any sense here, so it’s hard to tell what to substitute for it. Is/are gotten is passive, so “Two models are gotten” means “someone gets two models”; adding an extra noun phrase (object?) makes it gibberish: “someone gets two models the unit as input” has no meaning. As @Jason suggests, perhaps you’re looking for an active construction, not a passive one, in which case you’d just use get. That would make sense in the first sentence. In the second sentence, it seems receive would make more sense since we normally talk about receiving input in computer contexts.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    2 days ago










  • @JanusBahsJacquet What I mean by "is gotten" is "is given" but as it is a causative sentence, I can't use "give".
    – user148494
    2 days ago






  • 1




    What do you mean by "the resulted model"? Do you mean "the resulting model" which means the model which is the result of a piece of work: or "the model based on the results of a given study": or "the process resulted in the following model" which is another way of saying "the resulting model"? I'm afraid that the term "the resulted model" doesn't make sense.
    – BoldBen
    2 days ago
















0














I would like to know whether there is a substitution for "gotten" in the sentence below.





  1. The resulted model is gotten Control Flow Graph (CFG) generator to generate CFG of the program.

  2. Two models are gotten the unit as input to navigate the program.











share|improve this question









New contributor




user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • A got B to generate C?
    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago










  • Try providing another sentence conveying the same meaning so we know what that is supposed to mean. Else it may be treated as "Unclear."
    – Kris
    2 days ago












  • Gotten doesn’t make any sense here, so it’s hard to tell what to substitute for it. Is/are gotten is passive, so “Two models are gotten” means “someone gets two models”; adding an extra noun phrase (object?) makes it gibberish: “someone gets two models the unit as input” has no meaning. As @Jason suggests, perhaps you’re looking for an active construction, not a passive one, in which case you’d just use get. That would make sense in the first sentence. In the second sentence, it seems receive would make more sense since we normally talk about receiving input in computer contexts.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    2 days ago










  • @JanusBahsJacquet What I mean by "is gotten" is "is given" but as it is a causative sentence, I can't use "give".
    – user148494
    2 days ago






  • 1




    What do you mean by "the resulted model"? Do you mean "the resulting model" which means the model which is the result of a piece of work: or "the model based on the results of a given study": or "the process resulted in the following model" which is another way of saying "the resulting model"? I'm afraid that the term "the resulted model" doesn't make sense.
    – BoldBen
    2 days ago














0












0








0







I would like to know whether there is a substitution for "gotten" in the sentence below.





  1. The resulted model is gotten Control Flow Graph (CFG) generator to generate CFG of the program.

  2. Two models are gotten the unit as input to navigate the program.











share|improve this question









New contributor




user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I would like to know whether there is a substitution for "gotten" in the sentence below.





  1. The resulted model is gotten Control Flow Graph (CFG) generator to generate CFG of the program.

  2. Two models are gotten the unit as input to navigate the program.








word-choice word-substitution






share|improve this question









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user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago







user148494













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asked 2 days ago









user148494user148494

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11




New contributor




user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user148494 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • A got B to generate C?
    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago










  • Try providing another sentence conveying the same meaning so we know what that is supposed to mean. Else it may be treated as "Unclear."
    – Kris
    2 days ago












  • Gotten doesn’t make any sense here, so it’s hard to tell what to substitute for it. Is/are gotten is passive, so “Two models are gotten” means “someone gets two models”; adding an extra noun phrase (object?) makes it gibberish: “someone gets two models the unit as input” has no meaning. As @Jason suggests, perhaps you’re looking for an active construction, not a passive one, in which case you’d just use get. That would make sense in the first sentence. In the second sentence, it seems receive would make more sense since we normally talk about receiving input in computer contexts.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    2 days ago










  • @JanusBahsJacquet What I mean by "is gotten" is "is given" but as it is a causative sentence, I can't use "give".
    – user148494
    2 days ago






  • 1




    What do you mean by "the resulted model"? Do you mean "the resulting model" which means the model which is the result of a piece of work: or "the model based on the results of a given study": or "the process resulted in the following model" which is another way of saying "the resulting model"? I'm afraid that the term "the resulted model" doesn't make sense.
    – BoldBen
    2 days ago


















  • A got B to generate C?
    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago










  • Try providing another sentence conveying the same meaning so we know what that is supposed to mean. Else it may be treated as "Unclear."
    – Kris
    2 days ago












  • Gotten doesn’t make any sense here, so it’s hard to tell what to substitute for it. Is/are gotten is passive, so “Two models are gotten” means “someone gets two models”; adding an extra noun phrase (object?) makes it gibberish: “someone gets two models the unit as input” has no meaning. As @Jason suggests, perhaps you’re looking for an active construction, not a passive one, in which case you’d just use get. That would make sense in the first sentence. In the second sentence, it seems receive would make more sense since we normally talk about receiving input in computer contexts.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    2 days ago










  • @JanusBahsJacquet What I mean by "is gotten" is "is given" but as it is a causative sentence, I can't use "give".
    – user148494
    2 days ago






  • 1




    What do you mean by "the resulted model"? Do you mean "the resulting model" which means the model which is the result of a piece of work: or "the model based on the results of a given study": or "the process resulted in the following model" which is another way of saying "the resulting model"? I'm afraid that the term "the resulted model" doesn't make sense.
    – BoldBen
    2 days ago
















A got B to generate C?
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago




A got B to generate C?
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago












Try providing another sentence conveying the same meaning so we know what that is supposed to mean. Else it may be treated as "Unclear."
– Kris
2 days ago






Try providing another sentence conveying the same meaning so we know what that is supposed to mean. Else it may be treated as "Unclear."
– Kris
2 days ago














Gotten doesn’t make any sense here, so it’s hard to tell what to substitute for it. Is/are gotten is passive, so “Two models are gotten” means “someone gets two models”; adding an extra noun phrase (object?) makes it gibberish: “someone gets two models the unit as input” has no meaning. As @Jason suggests, perhaps you’re looking for an active construction, not a passive one, in which case you’d just use get. That would make sense in the first sentence. In the second sentence, it seems receive would make more sense since we normally talk about receiving input in computer contexts.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago




Gotten doesn’t make any sense here, so it’s hard to tell what to substitute for it. Is/are gotten is passive, so “Two models are gotten” means “someone gets two models”; adding an extra noun phrase (object?) makes it gibberish: “someone gets two models the unit as input” has no meaning. As @Jason suggests, perhaps you’re looking for an active construction, not a passive one, in which case you’d just use get. That would make sense in the first sentence. In the second sentence, it seems receive would make more sense since we normally talk about receiving input in computer contexts.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago












@JanusBahsJacquet What I mean by "is gotten" is "is given" but as it is a causative sentence, I can't use "give".
– user148494
2 days ago




@JanusBahsJacquet What I mean by "is gotten" is "is given" but as it is a causative sentence, I can't use "give".
– user148494
2 days ago




1




1




What do you mean by "the resulted model"? Do you mean "the resulting model" which means the model which is the result of a piece of work: or "the model based on the results of a given study": or "the process resulted in the following model" which is another way of saying "the resulting model"? I'm afraid that the term "the resulted model" doesn't make sense.
– BoldBen
2 days ago




What do you mean by "the resulted model"? Do you mean "the resulting model" which means the model which is the result of a piece of work: or "the model based on the results of a given study": or "the process resulted in the following model" which is another way of saying "the resulting model"? I'm afraid that the term "the resulted model" doesn't make sense.
– BoldBen
2 days ago










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