Other ways of reporting
In direct speech, the report represents or attempts to recreate or give the illusion
of the original speaker’s exact words. In indirect speech reports, the report is not
necessarily meant to be a recreation of someone’s exact words; it may function
just to report the content of what they said.
Speech reports, both direct and indirect, are most commonly made with
reporting clauses containing verbs such as ask, say and tell with a reported clause.
There are also other, more indirect ways in which people’s speech can be
reported, by using nouns such as argument, comment, complaint, observation,
remark
to refer to someone’s words, or by quoting them, especially the words of
famous people:
I didn’t like his
comment
that we were spending too much money
.
Well their biggest
complaint was
that the room was too small
.
To quote Shakespeare: “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women
merely players.”
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |