Reported Speech
Prof. Adnane Menouer
What is Reported Speech?
• Reported speech (indirect speech) is used to
tell someone what another person said
without quoting them directly.
• Example:
• Direct: She said, "I am tired."
• Reported: She said that she was tired.
Tense Backshifting
• When reporting in the past, the tense of the
verb usually moves one step back.
• Present Simple → Past Simple
• Present Continuous → Past Continuous
• Will → Would
• Present Perfect → Past Perfect
• Past Simple → Past Perfect
Pronoun Changes
• Change pronouns based on speaker and
listener.
• Examples:
• "I love you." → He said he loved me.
• "We are ready." → They said they were ready.
Time and Place Words
• now → then
• today → that day
• tomorrow → the next day
• yesterday → the day before
• here → there
• this → that
Reporting Questions
• Yes/No Questions: Use "if" or "whether"
• "Are you hungry?" → She asked if I was
hungry.
• Wh- Questions: Keep the question word, no
inversion
• "Where do you live?" → He asked where I
lived.
Reporting Commands and
Requests
• Commands: Use "to + verb"
• "Sit down!" → She told me to sit down.
• Negative commands: Use "not to + verb"
• "Don't touch that!" → He warned me not to
touch that.
Reporting Verbs
• Common verbs: say, tell, ask, advise, warn,
promise, deny
• Examples:
• "I will help." → He promised to help.
• "I didn't steal." → She denied stealing.
Exceptions to Backshifting
• No backshift needed when:
• - Reporting verb is in the present.
• - Statement is still true.
• Example:
• "The sun rises in the east." → He said the sun
rises in the east.
Practice Exercises
• Change to reported speech:
• 1. "I am learning English."
• 2. "We will go tomorrow."
• 3. "Do you like coffee?"
• 4. "Don’t be late!"
• 5. "I have visited London."
Sources and References
• Swan, M. (2005). Practical English Usage.
Oxford University Press.
• British Council Grammar:
https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/gramm
ar
• Cambridge Dictionary:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org
Thank You