Reported Speech - Сайт natalia

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Transcript Reported Speech - Сайт natalia

Reported Speech
Statements, commands and requests
Reported statements - intro

Look at these examples:
The little prince: “I want a sheep that
will live for a long time.”
 The little prince said (that) he wanted a
sheep that would live for a long time.
 The author: “This is my airplane.”
 The author said that was his airplane.

The differences
The changes you see are due to the fact
we don’t quote speaker’s words but
report them.
 The first difference you can see is the
omission of inverted comas.
 The second one is the use of
introductory verbs such as say, tell etc.
They are normally used in the past tense.
NB ‘Tell’ requires the object whereas ‘say’
doesn’t.
• The use of ‘that’ is optional.
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Further changes

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Personal pronouns and possessive
adjectives change, e.g. I
he/she,
you
I/we, my
his/her, your
my
etc.
The little prince: “I want a sheep that
will live for a long time.”
The little prince said (that) he wanted a
sheep that would live for a long time.
The author: “This is my airplane.”
The author said that was his airplane.
Tense change
o
Since the introductory verbs are
normally in the past tense, the tense in
the main part changes, too. Thus:
o Present
Simple
Past Simple
The little prince: “Everything is so small
where I live.”
o The little prince said that everything was
so small where he lived.
o
Tense change

Present Continuous
Past Continuous
The little prince: “I am telling you this
partly because of the snake.”
 The little prince said he was telling him
that partly because of the snake.

Tense change

Present Perfect
Past Perfect
“I’ve been silly,” she whispered at last.
 She whispered at last that she had been
silly.

Tense change

Past Simple
Past Perfect
“You are like the fox when I first
encountered him,” he told the roses.
 He told the roses they were like the fox
when he had first encountered him.

Tense change

Future Simple
Future in the Past
The fox said: “You will then understand
that your rose is unique.”
 The fox told the little prince he would
then understand that his rose was unique.

Tense change

Must
had to; can
could
“You must keep your promise,” said the
little prince.
 The little prince told him he had to keep
his promise.
 The little prince said: “I cannot
carry this body with me.”
The little prince said he could not
carry that body with him.

Other changes
Adverbs of time: now
then,
yesterday
the day before,
tomorrow
the next day,
today
that day, ago
before

Adverbs of place: here
there etc.

“I do not have to live here,” said the
little prince.
 The little prince said he did not have to
live there.

Reported commands & requests

Look at these examples:
“Draw me a sheep”, the little prince said.
 The little prince told him to draw him a
sheep.
 “Please draw me a sheep,” the little
prince said softly.
 The little prince asked him to draw him a
sheep.

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NB Use ‘tell’ with commands and ‘ask’ with requests
Changes

As you can see from the previous
examples, there is no tense change when
reporting commands and requests – the
verb changes into the infinitive.
Examples
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When reporting negative commands you
must remember that ‘not’ comes before
‘to’.
The rose said: “Don’t hang about so.”
The rose said to the little prince not to
hang about so.
“Do not come tonight” the little prince
said.
The little prince told him not to come
that night.
More examples
“Come back tomorrow evening” the little
prince told him.
 The little prince told him to come back
the next evening.
 The rose whispered: “Please forgive me.
Try to be happy.”
 The rose asked the little prince to
forgive her and to try to be
happy.

Thanks for attention
All used examples in direct speech taken from the book
“The Little Prince” by Antoine de Saint-Exupery,
translated by Irene Testot-Ferry