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Hi. My name's Ronnie. I'm going to teach you some very, very simple reported speech things.
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If you don't know what reported speech is, welcome to the confusing word... World of
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confusing reported speech and words. Reported speech, maybe when you study it in your class,
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the teacher or whoever, will call it indirect speech. It's the same. So, indirect speech
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or reported speech is exactly the same. Yay. Why or how do we use reported speech? Good
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question. We use this to report or to write down what somebody has said.
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If somebody has told you something, this is going to be a quote. A "quote" means you copy
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the person's words exactly. You have to be really careful not to change their words.
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Reported speech or indirect speech is usually only used for writing. So, we don't really
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have to worry about all of these crazy rules when we speak. Whew, thank god. So, we're
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just going to go through the past, the present, and the future. We're going to change quoted
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speech into reported speech. This little chart will help you. If you want to copy down this
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chart, take a picture of the chart, I guarantee it will make your reported speech grammar
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class or grammar learning amazing. Check it out.
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So, in the present tense, we have two tenses, we have present simple or simple present and
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we have present continuous. As an example: "She eats lunch." is present simple. This
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is something she does every day. So if I wanted to report or write down this, write this down,
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I would use reported speech. So: "She eats lunch." My present simple, what I'm going
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to do is I'm going to take my verb "eats", and change it to past simple. So, present
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simple verb we're going to change to past simple. I would say: "She said she ate lunch."
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In this sentence, "eat" is present simple; in the reported speech, "ate" is my past simple.
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So, present simple changes to past simple in reported speech.
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If I have a present continuous example, this means something the person is doing now...
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For example: "He is painting." So he's an artist, he's got a paint brush and some paint,
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and he's painting. We have to change this to past continuous. So, if we have "is painting",
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all we have to do to make this past continuous is change it to "was painting". Present continuous
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to past continuous, the only thing that changes is our "to be" verb changes from present to
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past. "He said he was painting."
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Moving right along. Or moving back, back to the future. We have present perfect. An example
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of a present perfect sentence: "He", sorry. "They had a shower." It's about time; they
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smell a lot. So, if we wanted to report this or write this down, we would say... Oh, he
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said... He... Sorry: "They have had". This is strange, "have had". Check this out. Present
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perfect is going to change to past perfect. So: "They have had", if we change it to past
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perfect, we have to change it to "had had". Ronnie, "had had"? Is that true? Yes. This
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is right. So, present perfect, "have had", changes to "had" plus PP: "had had". So: "They
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said they had had a shower." And it's about time, because they're pretty smelly.
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The next one: past simple. For example: "He took my photo." In this sentence, your verb
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is "took". This is a past. So, past simple, present perfect, both of these we have to
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change to, again, past perfect. So we're going to change this to:
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"They said he had taken my photo."
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And the last one, past perfect, don't change it. It's cool. It's already done. Past perfect
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you have to change to past perfect, so you don't have to change the grammar in this sentence.
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-"They had had a dog." -"They said they had had"-that's crazy again, but it's true-"a
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dog." So, if you have a past sentence, present perfect, simple past, or past perfect, all
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of these are going to be changed to past perfect. That's easier. "Had" plus the past participle.
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You okay?
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Moving on to the future. We have two future tenses in English. Future simple or simple
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future, which is going to be "will", and we have future "going to". Simple future: "She
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will go." Future "going to": "They are going to play football with their new shoes." Do
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you play football? Future simple: "She will go", all we're going to do is change the verb
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or the modal "will" to "would". So it's going to change to: "She would go". That's cool.
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"Will" changes to "would". That's easy.
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"They are going to play football." This is future "going to". To make this guy reported
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speech, all we're going to do is change "are" to "were" or "was". Oh, do you know when to
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use "was" and when to use "were"? If it's "I", we use "was". If it's "he", we use "was",
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and "she" we use "was", and if it's "it". If it's "were", we use "they" and "we".
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Reported speech can be really, really difficult and confusing, but if you can remember one,
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two, three, four, five easy ways to get this down, you're going to have no problem reporting
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what somebody has told you. Take care, and report carefully.