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 how verb tenses change when direct speech is converted into reported speech. This change is commonly known as tense backshifting.

Backshifting occurs because the reporting verb is usually in the past tense (e.g., said, told, explained). When this happens, the tense of the reported clause often shifts one step back in time.

Example:

Direct speech:
She said, “I am analysing the data.”

Reported speech:

She said that she was analysing the data.

Understanding tense changes is essential for forming accurate and grammatically correct reported speech.

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

  • recognise how verb tenses shift during reporting

  • apply the complete system of tense transformations

  • identify situations where tense does not change

  • avoid common learner errors involving tense backshifting


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

Direct speech:

He said, “I work in the laboratory.”

Reported speech:

He said that he worked in the laboratory.

Another example:

Direct speech:

She said, “I will finish the report.”

Reported speech:

She said that she would finish the report.

Direct Speech Reported Speech
work worked
will finish would finish

The tense changes because the reporting verb said is in the past tense.


3. Core Explanation

When the reporting verb is in the past tense, the verb in the reported clause usually shifts one step back in time.

This shift maintains the logical time relationship between the original statement and the reporting moment.

Example:

Direct speech:

The scientist said, “The experiment is successful.”

Reported speech:

The scientist said that the experiment was successful.

Here the tense changes from present simple → past simple.


4. Rule Table

Basic Backshifting Rules

Direct Speech Reported Speech
present simple past simple
present continuous past continuous
present perfect past perfect
past simple past perfect
will would
can could
may might

Examples

Direct Speech Reported Speech
She said, “I study biology.” She said that she studied biology.
She said, “I am writing the report.” She said that she was writing the report.
She said, “I have finished the work.” She said that she had finished the work.
She said, “I completed the task.” She said that she had completed the task.
She said, “I will start tomorrow.” She said that she would start the next day.

5. Usage

1. Reporting statements about past conversations

Example:

He said that he was reviewing the data.


2. Reporting completed actions

Example:

She said that she had finished the report.


3. Reporting future intentions

Example:

He said that he would begin the experiment later.


4. Reporting abilities

Example:

She said that she could solve the problem.


5. Reporting permissions or possibilities

Example:

He said that they might publish the results soon.


6. Signal Words

Certain reporting verbs and contextual expressions signal reported speech with tense shifts.

Expression Example
said that She said that the results were correct.
told He told the team that the system had failed.
explained that The instructor explained that the method was effective.
mentioned that She mentioned that the data required revision.
reported that The technician reported that the device had malfunctioned.

7. Special Cases

When Tense Does Not Change

Backshifting does not occur in some situations.


1. Universal truths

Example:

Direct speech:

The teacher said, “Water boils at 100°C.”

Reported speech:

The teacher said that water boils at 100°C.

Scientific facts remain unchanged.


2. Statements that are still true

Example:

Direct speech:

She said, “I live in London.”

Reported speech:

She said that she lives in London.

If the situation is still true, the tense may remain the same.


3. Reporting verb in present tense

Example:

Direct speech:

She says, “I like this method.”

Reported speech:

She says that she likes this method.

No tense change occurs because the reporting verb is present tense.


8. Additional Notes

Backshifting does not always indicate a real change in time. It simply reflects the grammatical relationship between the reporting verb and the reported clause.

Example:

Direct speech:

She said, “The experiment is successful.”

Reported speech:

She said that the experiment was successful.

The experiment may still be successful; the tense change reflects reported structure, not necessarily time change.


9. Common Errors

⚠ Failing to backshift tense

Incorrect:
She said that she studies chemistry.

Correct:
She said that she studied chemistry.

Explanation:
Present simple usually becomes past simple.


⚠ Incorrect tense transformation

Incorrect:
She said that she will finish the report.

Correct:
She said that she would finish the report.

Explanation:
Will → would in reported speech.


⚠ Incorrect perfect tense

Incorrect:
She said that she has completed the task.

Correct:
She said that she had completed the task.

Explanation:
Present perfect becomes past perfect.


⚠ Incorrect continuous tense

Incorrect:
She said that she is analysing the results.

Correct:
She said that she was analysing the results.

Explanation:
Present continuous becomes past continuous.


⚠ Unnecessary backshift with universal truths

Incorrect:
The teacher said that water boiled at 100°C.

Better:

The teacher said that water boils at 100°C.

Explanation:
Scientific facts usually do not change tense.


10. Lesson Mastery

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

✅ apply the rules of tense backshifting
✅ recognise how direct tenses change in reported speech
✅ identify situations where tense remains unchanged
✅ avoid common learner errors involving tense transformations

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