Course Content
English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1. Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will learn how declarative sentences (statements) are transformed into reported speech.

Statements are the most common type of reported speech, and they usually follow a clear grammatical structure involving a reporting verb and a that-clause.

Example:

Direct speech:

She said, “The experiment is successful.”

Reported speech:

She said that the experiment was successful.

In reported statements, quotation marks disappear and the sentence is restructured grammatically.

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

  • transform direct statements into reported speech

  • use that-clauses correctly

  • apply reporting verbs such as say, tell, explain, mention, and report

  • identify and correct errors in reported statements


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following example.

Direct speech:

The researcher said, “The results are accurate.”

Reported speech:

The researcher said that the results were accurate.

Element Direct Speech Reported Speech
quotation marks present removed
reporting verb said said
clause structure independent sentence that-clause

Reported statements therefore follow the structure:

Reporting verb + that + clause


3. Core Explanation

When statements are reported, several grammatical changes may occur:

  • quotation marks disappear

  • the sentence becomes a that-clause

  • pronouns may change

  • tenses may shift

  • time references may change

Example:

Direct speech:

She said, “I will complete the report tomorrow.”

Reported speech:

She said that she would complete the report the next day.


Using “Say” and “Tell”

Two very common reporting verbs are say and tell.

Say

Structure:

say + (that) + clause

Example:

She said that the system was working properly.


Tell

Structure:

tell + object + (that) + clause

Example:

She told the technician that the system was working properly.


4. Rule Table

Basic Structure of Reported Statements

Structure Example
subject + said that + clause She said that the experiment was successful.
subject + told + object + that + clause She told the team that the results were accurate.

Common Reporting Verbs

Verb Example
say She said that the report was ready.
tell He told the team that the meeting had started.
explain The scientist explained that the method was reliable.
mention She mentioned that the data needed verification.
report The study reported that the results were significant.

5. Usage

1. Reporting information

Example:

She said that the results were correct.


2. Reporting explanations

Example:

The researcher explained that the process was complex.


3. Reporting announcements

Example:

The manager said that the meeting would start soon.


4. Reporting research findings

Example:

The study reported that the treatment was effective.


5. Reporting past statements

Example:

The technician said that the system had stopped working earlier.


6. Signal Words

Certain reporting verbs often appear when statements are reported.

Reporting Verb Example
said She said that the system was functioning correctly.
told He told the team that the project was finished.
explained The scientist explained that the results were consistent.
reported The article reported that the experiment was successful.
mentioned She mentioned that the report needed revision.

These verbs introduce reported information.


7. Special Cases

Omitting “That”

In many sentences, the word that may be omitted.

Example:

She said that the results were accurate.

She said the results were accurate.

Both sentences are grammatically correct, but that is more common in formal writing.


Reporting Verbs in Present Tense

If the reporting verb is present, tense changes may not occur.

Example:

Direct speech:

She says, “I am busy.”

Reported speech:

She says that she is busy.


8. Additional Notes

In formal writing, reporting verbs may express different shades of meaning.

For example:

Reporting Verb Meaning
explain giving detailed information
report presenting factual information
mention referring briefly to something
state expressing formally

Example:

The report states that the data were collected carefully.


9. Common Errors

Using “say” with an object

Incorrect:

She said me that the meeting was cancelled.

Correct:

She told me that the meeting was cancelled.

Explanation:
Say does not take a direct object; tell does.


Keeping quotation marks

Incorrect:

She said that “the report was finished.”

Correct:

She said that the report was finished.

Explanation:
Reported speech does not use quotation marks.


Incorrect tense shift

Incorrect:

She said that she will finish the report.

Correct:

She said that she would finish the report.

Explanation:
Future will usually becomes would.


Incorrect pronoun reference

Incorrect:

She said that I was tired.

Correct:

She said that she was tired.

Explanation:
Pronouns must match the original speaker.


Missing reporting clause

Incorrect:

That the results were accurate.

Correct:

The researcher said that the results were accurate.

Explanation:
Reported statements require a reporting verb.


10. Lesson Mastery

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

✅ transform direct statements into reported speech
✅ use that-clauses correctly
✅ apply reporting verbs such as say, tell, explain, mention, and report
✅ identify and correct errors in reported statements

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