Reported speech: questions

Reported speech: questions

Do you know how to report a question that somebody asked? Test what you know with interactive exercises and read the explanation to help you.

Look at these examples to see how we can tell someone what another person asked.

direct speech: 'Do you work from home?' he said.
indirect speech: He asked me if I worked from home.

direct speech: 'Who did you see?' she asked.
indirect speech: She asked me who I'd seen.

direct speech: 'Could you write that down for me?' she asked.
indirect speech: She asked me to write it down.

Try this exercise to test your grammar.

Grammar test 1

Grammar B1-B2: Reported speech 2: 1

Read the explanation to learn more.

Grammar explanation

A reported question is when we tell someone what another person asked. To do this, we can use direct speech or indirect speech.

direct speech: 'Do you like working in sales?' he asked.
indirect speech: He asked me if I liked working in sales.

In indirect speech, we change the question structure (e.g. Do you like) to a statement structure (e.g. I like).

We also often make changes to the tenses and other words in the same way as for reported statements (e.g. have donehad done, todaythat day). You can learn about these changes on the Reported speech 1 – statements page.

Yes/no questions

In yes/no questions, we use if or whether to report the question. If is more common.

'Are you going to the Helsinki conference?'
  • He asked me if I was going to the Helsinki conference.
'Have you finished the project yet?'
  • She asked us whether we'd finished the project yet.

Questions with a question word

In what, where, why, who, when or how questions, we use the question word to report the question.

'What time does the train leave?'
  • He asked me what time the train left.
'Where did he go?'
  • She asked where he went.

Reporting verbs

The most common reporting verb for questions is ask, but we can also use verbs like enquire, want to know or wonder.

'Did you bring your passports?'
  • She wanted to know if they'd brought their passports.
'When could you get this done by?'
  • He wondered when we could get it done by.

Offers, requests and suggestions

If the question is making an offer, request or suggestion, we can use a specific verb pattern instead, for example offer + infinitive, ask + infinitive or suggest + ing.

'Would you like me to help you?'
  • He offered to help me.
'Can you hold this for me, please?'
  • She asked me to hold it.
'Why don't we check with Joel?'
  • She suggested checking with Joel.

Do this exercise to test your grammar again.

Grammar test 2

Grammar B1-B2: Reported speech 2: 2

Language level

Average: 4.3 (57 votes)

Submitted by Anastasiaaaa on Fri, 29/11/2024 - 13:14

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Hello!

I was wondering if it is okay to use both options in the following sentence:

  • David asked me politely to give him a hand.
  • David asked me if I could give him a hand.

I hope I am not burdening you with it,

Thank you for your reply in advance 

Best regards!

Submitted by par_iss89 on Fri, 04/10/2024 - 10:59

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Hi 

Can you tell me which one is correct?

 

he asked me if was i going to the conference 

he asked me what time left the train 

he asked me if i wanted him to come to the party

he asked me why is she travelling to tanta

Hi par_iss89,

The third sentence is grammatically correct; the others all contain errors in word order.

Please note that generally we do not answer questions like this as we are not a service for providing answers to tasks from elsewhere. We would end up doing people's tests and homework for them if so! Our main role is providing explanations as to why something is correct or not rather than answers to tasks.

 

Peter

The LearnEnglish Team

Submitted by AGermanGirlLea… on Wed, 25/09/2024 - 18:38

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Hello! :)

I have a question concerning reported questions. I have trouble understanding how to change the auxiliary verb "do" in questions. 

For example:

  • Direct Speech: "Did you give Aunt Sadia my flight details?"
  • Indirect Speech: He asked his parents if they had given Aunt Sadia his flight details.

In this case, the "did give" in the direct speech makes the backshift from simple past to past perfect (had given). In my grammar book at school, it says that we should omit do/did/does when reporting questions. I thought the indirect speech of the sentence was "He asked his parents if they gave Aunt Sadia his flight details" because I omitted the "did" as it was explained in my book to do so. Now there's another question:

  • Direct Speech: "Do I need a large suitcase for the trip?"
  • Indirect Speech: He asked his parents if he needed a large suitcase for the trip.

I don't quite understand why I can omit the "do" in the indirect speech in this case and only make the backshift of the tense for "need" (--> "needed"). Why can't I say "He asked his parents if he did need a large suitcase?". 

 

Hello AGermanGirlLearningEnglish,

I think your question is not really about omitting 'did'. Let me explain.

When we report questions we do not use the question structure. For example:

Where is he?

> She asked where he is.

Here, the original sentence is a question and uses inversion: the verb (is) comes before the subject (he). In the reported question we simply use the structure for a regular sentence: the verb (is) comes after the subject (he). Notice that backshifting is not necessary when the situation is still the same. In other words, if she is still wondering where he is then we can leave the sentence in the present. Another example of reported speech should make this clear:

"I love you."

She said she loved me. [she loved me when she said it; we don't know if she still loves me now]

She said she loves me. [she loved me when she said it and she still loves me now]

When we report a question we use the same question word (where, when, who etc) as in the original/direct speech sentence. When the question is a yes/no question we use 'if'. So, in your example we use 'if' and then regular sentence structure

Did you give Aunt Sadia my flight details?

He asked his parents if they had given Aunt Sadia his flight details.

You can use 'gave' here instead of 'had given' if the situation is still unchanged. Since (from the context) it seems clear that this is the case, 'gave' should be fine here.

 

Your second example works the same way:

Do I need a large suitcase for the trip?

He asked his parents if he needed a large suitcase for the trip.

'Did' is not needed as we use a regular sentence structure. You could use a present form ('needs') if the trip has not happened yet, but backshifting is fine here in either case.

 

Peter

The LearnEnglish Team

Submitted by rojina-bogati on Tue, 09/07/2024 - 18:08

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Does the direct speech "when does the train left?"i asked can be chaged into ' I asked when does the train left?'

Hello rojina-bogati,

First of all, there is an error in the direct speech example. You have mixed present and past forms. The question should be one of these:

When does the train leave? [present tense]

When did the train leave? [past tense]

When we report a question we don't need to use inversion, so the reported question would be as follows:

I asked when the train leaves. [present tense]

I asked when the train left. [past tense]

Note that there is no question mark (?) here as it is not a question.

 

Peter

The LearnEnglish Team

Submitted by Sefika on Mon, 24/06/2024 - 16:13

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When Peter Schjeldahl found out he had cancer, while driving through upstate New York, he was suddenly overwhelmed by the beauty of the land. “How many times had I seen and loved the sight?” he wondered. “How many more times would I?”
(From The New Yorker@NewYorker, 24 June 2024)
What I would like to know is why the past perfect is used in direct speech ("How many times had I seen and loved the sight?" he wondered). Is it correct? Shouldn't "had" be replaced by "have"? Likewise, shouldn't the "would" in the following question be "will"? 

I would appreciate your helping me to understand it.

 

 

 

Hello Sefika,

This is a question better asked of the author of the text. Perfect forms are contextual, so the had seen/had loved must be the speaker reflecting on these activities in relation to something else in his past. I don't know if that is included in the broader text or if the author has simply used a non-standard form here for some reason. We end up getting into speculative territory or even considering whether or not the author has simply made an error or chosen to use the language in a creative way which is atypical of normal usage.

 

Generally, we provide information on language systems and explain our own examples on this site. We avoid explaining or commenting on decontextualised fragments from fictional works for the reasons above.

 

Peter

The LearnEnglish Team