Form active passive
Simple cleaning being cleaned Perfect having having been cleaned cleaned
My cousin likes washing his cat. The cat likes being washed by cousin. I remember having told the news. I remember having been told the news. Indirect speech 1 When we tell people what somebody said or thought we often use indirect speech.Statements are usually reported with a past tense verb and optional that. The form of the verb that follows the moves back in time. Tenses and pronouns change in indirect speech if the time and speaker are different: Direct Indirect speech Present Indefinite - Past Indefinite Present Continuous - Past Continuous Present Perfect - Past Perfect Past Indefinite - Past Perfect Future Indefinite - Future Indefinite in the Past
We also change some time and place expressions if the context has changed: Direct Indirect speech This that These those Here there Now then Today that day This week that week Yesterday the day before Last week the week before Two days ago two days before Tomorrow the next day Next week the next week
Indirect speech 2 We can report questions with verbs like ask, wonder, want to know. Tense change rules are the same. “Where do you live? ” he asked He asked where I lived. If there is no question word we add if or whether. “Are you British? ”-She asked me if/whether I was British. In reported questions we use the same word order as in statements: “Do you speak English? ”- She want to know if I speak English. Reporting commands and request: Command are reported with tell and the infinitive. “ Wait! Wait! ” I told him to wait.
Requests are reported with ask and the infinitive. “ Please wait! ” I asked her to wait. Other reporting words: Advise, agree, offer, remind, refuse, invite, decide, suggest
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