Course Content
Module 11: Reported Speech (Complete Transformation System)
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English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1. Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will learn the fundamental concept of reported speech, also called indirect speech or narration.

Reported speech is used when we report what someone said without quoting their exact words. Instead of repeating the original sentence exactly, we reconstruct the meaning of the statement within another sentence.

This process often involves changes in:

  • verb tense

  • pronouns

  • time expressions

  • sentence structure

Understanding reported speech allows learners to accurately describe conversations, statements, and information given by others.

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • distinguish between direct speech and reported speech

  • understand how reporting verbs introduce statements

  • recognise the basic structure of reported speech

  • understand how reported speech changes sentence structure and emphasis


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

Direct speech:

She said, “The experiment is successful.”

Reported speech:

She said that the experiment was successful.

Type Sentence
Direct speech She said, “The experiment is successful.”
Reported speech She said that the experiment was successful.

In direct speech, we repeat the speaker’s exact words.
In reported speech, we describe what the speaker said.


3. Core Explanation

Direct Speech

Direct speech reproduces the exact words spoken by a person.

Example:

He said, “I will finish the report today.”

Characteristics of direct speech:

  • quotation marks are used

  • the speaker’s exact words are preserved

  • the sentence remains unchanged


Reported Speech

Reported speech conveys the meaning of what someone said without repeating the exact words.

Example:

He said that he would finish the report that day.

In reported speech:

  • quotation marks are removed

  • pronouns may change

  • verb tenses may shift

  • time expressions may change


4. Rule Table

Structure of Direct Speech

Structure Example
reporting verb + comma + quotation marks She said, “The data are correct.”

Structure of Reported Speech

Structure Example
subject + reporting verb + (that) + clause She said that the data were correct.

The conjunction “that” may sometimes be omitted.

Example:

She said the data were correct.


Common Reporting Verbs

Reporting Verb Example
say She said that the experiment was successful.
tell He told us that the results were accurate.
explain The scientist explained that the method was reliable.
mention She mentioned that the data needed revision.
report The technician reported that the system had failed.

5. Usage

1. Reporting information

Example:

The researcher said that the results were promising.


2. Reporting conversations

Example:

She said that she would review the report later.


3. Reporting news or statements

Example:

The spokesperson announced that the project would continue.


4. Reporting explanations

Example:

The instructor explained that the process required careful observation.


5. Reporting previous statements

Example:

He mentioned that the experiment had produced unexpected results.


6. Signal Words

Certain reporting verbs often signal reported speech.

Expression Example
said that She said that the experiment was successful.
told He told the team that the system needed testing.
explained that The scientist explained that the results were reliable.
mentioned that She mentioned that the report was incomplete.
reported that The technician reported that the device had malfunctioned.

These expressions introduce reported statements.


7. Special Cases

Optional “That”

The conjunction “that” can often be omitted in informal contexts.

Example:

Formal:

She said that the experiment was successful.

Informal:

She said the experiment was successful.

Both sentences are grammatically correct.


Reporting Verb in Present Tense

If the reporting verb is in the present tense, the tense of the reported clause usually does not change.

Example:

Direct speech:

She says, “I like this method.”

Reported speech:

She says that she likes this method.


8. Additional Notes

Reported speech allows speakers and writers to summarise or explain what someone said without quoting them exactly.

It is widely used in:

  • news reporting

  • academic writing

  • research reports

  • storytelling and narratives

Example:

The scientist stated that the findings required further investigation.


9. Common Errors

⚠ Keeping quotation marks in reported speech

Incorrect:
She said that “the experiment was successful.”

Correct:
She said that the experiment was successful.

Explanation:
Reported speech does not use quotation marks.


⚠ Incorrect pronoun reference

Incorrect:
She said that I completed the report.
(if she completed it)

Correct:
She said that she completed the report.

Explanation:
Pronouns must match the speaker’s perspective.


⚠ Missing reporting verb

Incorrect:
That the experiment was successful.

Correct:
She said that the experiment was successful.

Explanation:
Reported speech requires a reporting verb.


⚠ Incorrect clause structure

Incorrect:
She said that is successful the experiment.

Correct:
She said that the experiment was successful.

Explanation:
Reported clauses follow normal sentence order.


⚠ Confusing “say” and “tell”

Incorrect:
She said me that the experiment was successful.

Correct:
She told me that the experiment was successful.

Explanation:
Tell requires an object.


10. Lesson Mastery

After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:

✅ distinguish between direct speech and reported speech
✅ recognise how reporting verbs introduce statements
✅ understand the basic structure of reported speech
✅ identify how reported speech changes sentence structure

 

 
 
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