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  1. Reported Speech: Important Grammar Rules and Examples • 7ESL

    make questions with reported speech

  2. Reported Speech

    make questions with reported speech

  3. Reported speech questions exercises pdf

    make questions with reported speech

  4. Reported speech: Questions

    make questions with reported speech

  5. Questions in Reported Speech

    make questions with reported speech

  6. Reported Speech: online worksheet and pdf

    make questions with reported speech

VIDEO

  1. REPORTED SPEECH IN ENGLISH |Indirect speech

  2. EN.06 Reported Speech (Questions)

  3. Reported Speech in English

  4. Reported speech and type of reported speech// Things change in reported speech.. learn from basic

  5. 🔥Direct And Indirect Speech Most Important Questions

  6. REPORTED SPEECH|GRAMMAR|RANDOM VIDEO BY A STUDENT |#cbse #boardexam #class10 #class9

COMMENTS

  1. Reported speech: questions

    Grammar explanation A reported question is when we tell someone what another person asked. To do this, we can use direct speech or indirect speech. direct speech: 'Do you like working in sales?' he asked. indirect speech: He asked me if I liked working in sales. In indirect speech, we change the question structure (e.g.

  2. Reported Questions

    Remember that there are basically three types of question : YES/NO questions: Do you want tea? Question Word questions: Where did you drink tea? Choice questions: Do you prefer tea or coffee? Reported choice questions have the same structure as Reported YES/NO questions.

  3. Reported Speech

    Direct speech: The employer asked me, "Do you have experience with people in the corporate setting?" Indirect speech: The employer asked me if I had experience with people in the corporate setting. Direct speech: "I'm working on my thesis," I told James. Indirect speech: I told James that I was working on my thesis. Reported Speech Structure

  4. Reported Speech

    Here's how it works: We use a 'reporting verb' like 'say' or 'tell'. ( Click here for more about using 'say' and 'tell' .) If this verb is in the present tense, it's easy. We just put 'she says' and then the sentence: Direct speech: I like ice cream. Reported speech: She says (that) she likes ice cream.

  5. Reported speech

    Reporting and summarising 1 Reporting and summarising 2 Tenses in reported speech When reporting what people say or think in English, we need to remember that the rules for tense forms in reported speech are exactly the same as in the rest of the language.

  6. Reported Speech: Rules, Examples, Exceptions

    Grammar Reported Speech: Rules, Examples, Exceptions Shayna Oliveira Grammar 👉 Quiz 1 / Quiz 2 Advanced Grammar Course What is reported speech? "Reported speech" is when we talk about what somebody else said - for example: Direct Speech: "I've been to London three times." Reported Speech: She said she'd been to London three times.

  7. Reported Speech (Part 2)

    1. Requests/orders "Asked me to" is used for requests. "Told me to" is stronger; it is used for orders/commands. The main verb stays in the infinitive: She asked me to make copies. He told me to go to the bank. 2. Yes/no questions "Asked if" and "wanted to know if" are equal. The main verb changes according to the rules for reported statements:

  8. Reported questions

    Reported Questions. When we report what people say, we usually change the tense of the verbs to reflect that we are reporting - not giving direct speech. This pattern is followed when we report questions and there are also other important changes between direct questions and reported questions. Reported questions are one form of reported speech.

  9. Reported Speech

    He asked if she lived in London. It is also important that you use an indirect question in reported speech, i.e. after the interrogative or ‚whether' / ‚if' you continue the sentence as if it were a statement (subject-verb etc.). The auxiliary verb ‚do' is not used in indirect questions. He asked: Where does she live? - He asked ...

  10. Reported Questions

    Say and Tell Reported questions worksheets Reported questions - learn the English grammar rules for using reported questions. Helpful explanations and example sentences.

  11. Reported Speech Questions

    a. We use introductory verbs like ask, wonder, want to know, inquire... b. We change the interrogative word-order to statement word-order. c. All the other changes in indirect speech still apply. Examples: Feng: How old is your cousin? Feng asked me how old my cousin was. Her Mother: Do you smoke? Her mother asked me if I smoked.

  12. What is Reported Speech and How to Use It? with Examples

    Reported Questions: In reported questions, the reporting verb is usually "asked." The tense in the reported speech changes from the present simple to the past simple, and the word order changes from a question to a statement. For example, "What time is it?" becomes "She asked what time it was."

  13. Reported Speech: Important Grammar Rules and Examples • 7ESL

    Reported Questions in English Reported Commands and Requests in English Reported Speech Video Reported Speech When we use reported speech, we are referring to something that was said either by ourselves or by someone else in the past. An example of this might be 'he said that he was going shopping.

  14. Reported speech: indirect speech

    Reporting wh -questions Indirect reports of wh -questions consist of a reporting clause, and a reported clause beginning with a wh -word ( who, what, when, where, why, how ). We don't use a question mark: He asked me what I wanted. Not: He asked me what I wanted? The reported clause is in statement form (subject + verb), not question form:

  15. Questions in Reported Speech

    Reported speech questions are different from direct questions in several ways. Direct questions are the questions that we ask directly, whereas reported questions are questions that are reported or repeated by someone else. Direct questions typically start with a question word, such as "what," "where," "when," "who," "why," or "how." Reported ...

  16. Reported Speech

    Reported Questions Reported questions to go like Direct Speech: Where do you reside? We make the change to reported speech by- It is similar to reported statements. The tense changes are exact, and we keep the question's word. But we need to change the grammar of that normal sentence into positive. For eg: Direct Speech: Where do you reside?

  17. PDF Reported Speech Discussion Questions

    Reported Speech Discussion Questions. Work in twos or threes. Take turns asking questions from below, for three or four minutes each time before switching roles. Is there is more than one question on a line that you choose, only use the other questions on that line after your partner answers the first. question, and only if they don't mention ...

  18. Reported Speech Exercises

    Perfect English Grammar Here's a list of all the reported speech exercises on this site: ( Click here to read the explanations about reported speech ) Reported Statements: Present Simple Reported Statement Exercise (quite easy) (in PDF here) Present Continuous Reported Statement Exercise (quite easy) (in PDF here)

  19. Reported speech: statements

    Grammar explanation Reported speech is when we tell someone what another person said. To do this, we can use direct speech or indirect speech. direct speech: 'I work in a bank,' said Daniel. indirect speech: Daniel said that he worked in a bank.

  20. Reported Speech Exercise: Questions

    Transform these questions into reported speech (start the sentence with " she asked him ".) What is your name? → She asked him Where do you live? → She asked him What do you do for a living? → She asked him What time do you wake up? → She asked him Do you have a shower every morning? → She asked him Where did you go last weekend? → She asked him

  21. Reported Speech

    Frequently Asked Questions on Reported Speech in English What Is Reported Speech? Reported speech is the form in which one can convey a message said by oneself or someone else, mostly in the past. It can also be said to be the third person view of what someone has said.

  22. Conversation Using Reported Speech Lesson Plans

    Using Reported Speech: ESL Lesson Plan. Reported speech is also known as indirect speech and is commonly used in spoken conversations to report what others have said. A keen grasp of correct tense usage, as well as the ability to correctly shift pronouns and time expressions, is essential when using reported speech .

  23. Indirect Questions

    Indirect questions are a way of being polite. They are very, very common in English, especially when you're talking to someone you don't know. To make an indirect 'yes / no' question, we use 'if' and the word order of a normal positive sentence. This is the same as for reported 'yes / no' questions.

  24. Trump's 'Bloodbath' Comment

    Para leer en español, vea esta traducción de Google Translate. While speaking about the potential loss of U.S. auto manufacturing jobs to foreign countries, former President Donald Trump said if ...

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    Gov. Kristi Noem is facing legal action after her latest endorsement caused an online furor that now risks taking a bite out of her standing in South Dakota at a time when she's rumored to be ...

  26. Trump mocks Biden's stutter again, drawing outrage

    Former president Donald Trump mocked President Biden's stutter during a campaign speech in Rome, Ga., on March 9. (Video: The Washington Post, Photo: David Walter Banks/The Washington Post)

  27. Full Transcript of Biden's State of the Union Speech

    President Biden delivered his annual State of the Union address on Thursday to a joint session of Congress. The following is a transcript of his remarks, as recorded by The New York Times. Good ...

  28. Psychiatrist sees signs Biden was medicated for State of the Union

    For example, Mr. Biden typically rests his hands on the podium while delivering a speech from the teleprompter. During the State of the Union, he frequently gestured and moved with his hands at a ...

  29. Conspiracies around Catherine, Princess of Wales have reached a fever

    Typically complimentary British media outlets began to ask more pointed questions. American TV shows openly made fun of what was quickly becoming a royal mess, even trotting out theories that had ...

  30. Trump says there will be a 'bloodbath' if he loses the election

    Trump made the comments at a rally in Ohio, where he spoke about auto manufacturing. The Biden campaign responded by criticizing the former president's "threats of political violence."