Direct Speech / Quoted Speech
Saying exactly what someone has said is called direct speech (sometimes called quoted speech)Here what a person says appears within quotation marks ("...") and should be word for word.
For example:
She said, "Today's lesson is on presentations."
or
"Today's lesson is on presentations", she said.
Indirect Speech / Reported Speech
Indirect speech (sometimes called reported speech), doesn't use quotation marks to enclose what the person said and it doesn't have to be word for word.When reporting speech the tense usually changes. This is because when we use reported speech, we are usually talking about a time in the past (because obviously the person who spoke originally spoke in the past). The verbs therefore usually have to be in the past too.
For example:
Direct speech | Indirect speech |
---|---|
"I'm going to the cinema", he said. | He said he was going to the cinema. |
Tense change
As a rule when you report something someone has said you go back a tense: (the tense on the left changes to the tense on the right):Direct speech | Indirect speech | |
---|---|---|
Present simple She said, "It's cold." |
› | Past simple She said it was cold. |
Present continuous She said, "I'm teaching English online." |
› | Past continuous She said she was teaching English online. |
Present perfect simple She said, "I've been on the web since 1999." |
› | Past perfect simple She said she had been on the web since 1999. |
Present perfect continuous She said, "I've been teaching English for seven years." |
› | Past perfect continuous She said she had been teaching English for seven years. |
Past simple She said, "I taught online yesterday." |
› | Past perfect She said she had taught online yesterday. |
Past continuous She said, "I was teaching earlier." |
› | Past perfect continuous She said she had been teaching earlier. |
Past perfect She said, "The lesson had already started when he arrived." |
› | Past perfect NO CHANGE - She said the lesson had already started when he arrived. |
Past perfect continuous She said, "I'd already been teaching for five minutes." |
› | Past perfect continuous NO CHANGE - She said she'd already been teaching for five minutes. |
Direct speech | Indirect speech | |
---|---|---|
will She said, "I'll teach English online tomorrow." |
› | would She said she would teach English online tomorrow. |
can She said, "I can teach English online." |
› | could She said she could teach English online. |
must She said, "I must have a computer to teach English online." |
› | had to She said she had to have a computer to teach English online. |
shall She said, "What shall we learn today?" |
› | should She asked what we should learn today. |
may She said, "May I open a new browser?" |
› | might She asked if she might open a new browser. |
!Note - There is no change to; could, would, should, might and ought to.
Time changeIf the reported sentence contains an expression of time, you must change it to fit in with the time of reporting.For example we need to change words like here and yesterday if they have different meanings at the time and place of reporting.
For example:-
Pronoun changeIn reported speech, the pronoun often changes.For example:
Reporting VerbsSaid, told and asked are the most common verbs used in indirect speech.We use asked to report questions:- For example: I asked Lynne what time the lesson started. We use told with an object. For example: Lynne told me she felt tired. !Note - Here me is the object. We usually use said without an object. For example: Lynne said she was going to teach online. If said is used with an object we must include to ; For example: Lynne said to me that she'd never been to China. !Note - We usually use told. For example: Lynne told me (that) she'd never been to China. There are many other verbs we can use apart from said, told and asked. These include:-
For example: He asked me to come to the party:-
Use of 'That' in reported speechIn reported speech, the word that is often used.For example: He told me that he lived in Greenwich. However, that is optional. For example: He told me he lived in Greenwich. !Note - That is never used in questions, instead we often use if. For example: He asked me if I would come to the party. The sneaky commaI'm British, so I only tend to place the comma inside quotation marks when it's part of the sentence being quoted."I didn't notice that the comma was inside the quotation marks," Lynne said, "but Hekner did." That said, I read so much American literature, that even I tuck them away sometimes. Really, no one has set in stone what the rules of the English language are. It's a diverse language, and the rules that exist have arisen through usage, and they can change in exactly the same way, so maybe it doesn't matter, but it's best to be consistent. (Thanks Hekner.) | SINOPSIS FILM A Good Day to Die HardSinopsis: Polisi tanpa ampun John McClane (Bruce Willis) pergi ke Moskow untuk bertemu dengan putranya, Jack (Jai Courtney). John tidak tahu bahwa Jack adalah seorang agen CIA yang tangguh dan sedang bertugas untuk menghentikan pencurian senjata nuklir Diburu oleh gerakan bawah tanah Rusia dan berpacu dengan waktu untuk mencegah terjadinya perang, kedua McClane bersatu dengan gaya yang berbeda dan menjadikan mereka jagoan yang tak terkalahkan. Sutradara: John Moore Bintang Film: Bruce Willis, Jai Courtney Trailer Film A Good Day to Die Hard SynopsisA Good Day to Die HardIconoclastic, take-no-prisoners cop John McClane, for the first time, finds himself on foreign soil after traveling to Moscow to help his wayward son Jack--unaware that Jack is really a highly-trained CIA operative out to stop a nuclear weapons heist. With the Russian underworld in pursuit, and battling a countdown to war, the two McClanes discover that their opposing methods make them unstoppable heroes.
|