Reported Speech
Reported Speech
You saw Paul yesterday and you want to tell somebody what he said. There are two ways of doing this:
You can repeat Paul’s words (direct speech): Paul said, ‘I’m feeling ill.’
Or you can use reported speech: Paul said that he was feeling ill.
When we use reported speech, the main verb of the sentence is usually past (Paul said that … /
I told her that … etc.). The rest of the sentence is usually past too:
Paul said that he was feeling ill. or Paul said he was feeling ill.
In general, the present in direct speech changes to the past in reported speech:
The past simple (did/saw/knew etc.) can stay the same in reported speech, or you can change it to the past
perfect (had done / had seen / had known etc.):
Example
Direct
Reported
Direct
Reported
Paul said that his new job is boring. (The situation is still the same. His job is still boring now.)
Direct
Reported
Helen told me that she wants to go to Canada next year. (Helen still wants to go to Canada next year.)
But if the situation has changed or finished, you need to use a past verb. Compare:
Paul left the room suddenly. He said ‘I have to go.’ (direct speech)
Paul left the room suddenly. He said (that) he had to go. (not has to go)
You need to use the past in reported speech when what was said is different from what is really true.
For example:
You met Rachel a few days ago. She said:
Later that day you meet Joe in the street. You say:
Direct
Reported
Direct
Reported
Direct
Reported
Paul said not to worry about him. (but not Paul said me)