We often have to give information about what people say or think. In order to do this you can use direct or quoted speech, or indirect or reported speech.
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.
ROSA LEON
A06
C o n t e n t s (Click on Link)
- Answer Key Units 15 and 16 (2)
- D (1)
- Indirect Speech (1)
- Unit 01: Present and Future Time (2)
- Unit 02: Past Time (6)
- Unit 03: Simple and Progressive Tenses (2)
- Unit 04: Additions / Tags / Short Answers (2)
- Unit 05: Modals Degree of Necessity (3)
- Unit 06: Modals Degree of Certainty (5)
- Unit 07: Count and Non-Count Nouns (2)
- Unit 08: Definite and Indefinite Articles (1)
- Unit 09: Quantifiers (3)
- Unit 10: Modification of Nouns (2)
- Unit 11: Adjective Clauses: Review and Expansion (9)
- Unit 12: Adjective Clauses with Prepositions (2)
- Unit 13: The Passive (3)
- Unit 15: Gerunds (2)
- Unit 16: Infinitives (2)
- unit 17 (1)