Grammar Reference Reported Speech
Grammar Reference Reported Speech
We can report what someone says by repeating the original words of the speaker
(He said, 'I'm sorry.). This is called direct speech. (If someone says something that
you want to tell another person, you can report it using direct speech.)
When we don't need or want to repeat the actual words of the speaker, we can use
indirect speech or reported speech (He said that he was sorry) or a summary
report (He apologized).
DIRECT SPEECH
In direct speech we use quotation (or speech) marks to show the exact words the
person said.
"I’m hungry."
REPORTING VERBS
Say and tell are both reporting verbs. We use tell when we say who we are
speaking to.
CORRECT: She tells me she loves chicken sandwiches. (The speaker is talking to
‘me’.)
CORRECT: She says she loves chicken sandwiches. (We don’t know who the
speaker is talking to.)
WRONG: She says me she loves chicken sandwiches. (We don’t use ‘me’ with the
reporting verb ‘say’.)
If the reporting verb is in the present tense, then the reported statement stays in the
present tense:
Direct speech
1
Reported speech
He says he is hungry.
If the reporting verb is in the past tense, we usually change the present form to a
past form in reported speech.
Direct speech
Reported speech
Later, the boy’s mother tells the father: He said he was hungry.
We can use that, but we can also miss it out and the meaning is the same.
She told me that she loved chicken sandwiches. > She told me she loved chicken
sandwiches.
Form
In reported speech, we usually move the direct speech verb one step back in the
past.
"I have finished my homework" -> He said he had finished his homework.
"I have been studying Chinese" -> She said she had been studying Chinese.
2
5) Is going to - > was going to
"I am going to go home" -> She said she was going to go home.
"I will go to the bank later" -> He said he would go to the bank later.
Notes
2) And you can't go further back in time than the past perfect, so it stays the same
too:
"I had driven to work" -> She said she had driven to work.
“I can/can't speak Turkish” -> She said she could/couldn't speak Turkish.
“I must/mustn't wash my hair” -> She said she had to/didn't have to wash her hair.
“I could take the bus” -> He said he could take the bus.
5) We don’t change the verb in reported speech if the situation hasn’t changed, for
example if it’s a fact or is generally true:
6) But we can use the past tense to show you're not certain the other person loves
her/him – for example, the other person wasn’t telling the truth
Questions
A direct question is:
3
He asked where I was from.
Form summary
Positive
"I’ve been working hard." > She told me that she’d been working hard.
Negative
"I didn’t have time to go shopping." > He said he hadn’t had time to go shopping.
“I can’t talk to you." > She told me that she couldn’t talk to me.
"I wouldn’t want to live in the country." > He said he wouldn’t want to live in the
country.
Question
"Where can I buy a hamburger?" > She asked where she could buy a hamburger.
"Who must I see at the bank?" > He asked who he had to see at the bank.
"Are you going to Leila’s party?" > She asked if I was going to Leila’s party.
Short answers
4
Take note: facts and general truths We don’t change the verb in reported speech
if the situation hasn’t changed, for example if it’s a fact or is generally true. Compare:
She told me she loves me. (The speaker uses the present tense to show (s)he
believes the other person still loves her/him now.)
She told me she loved me. (The speaker uses the past tense to show (s)he isn’t
certain the other person loves her/him – for example, the other person wasn’t telling
the truth.)
The past perfect doesn’t change in reported speech because there isn’t a verb form
further 'back in time'.
"I had never eaten sushi before I went to Japan." > 'She told me that she had never
eaten sushi before she went to Japan.
"I know which way to go." -> He thought he knew which way to go.
"I stole the books." -> He admitted that he had stolen the books.
"Why doesn’t she like me?" -> He wondered why she didn’t like him.
Spoken English
Some contracted forms in reported speech can be difficult to hear, for example the
past perfect and conditional. He asked who’d eaten the cake. I told him he’d have to
take the train. In the first example, the words ‘who’and ‘had’ become who’d. In the
second example, ‘he’and ‘would’ become he’d. In both examples, two different
words are shortened to just a /d/ sound. So, listen carefully for past tense
contractions – make sure you get them right.