When using reported speech, most students learn to use "say" and "tell":
Examples:
John told me he was going to stay late at work.
Peter said he wanted to visit his parents that weekend.
Peter said he wanted to visit his parents that weekend.
These forms are perfectly correct for reporting what others have said. However, there are a number of other reporting verbs which can more accurately describe what someone has said. These verbs take a variety of structures. The following list gives you reporting verbs in various categories based on sentence structure. Notice that a number of verbs can take more than one form.
REPORTED SPEECH
SUMMARY OF REPORTING VERBS
Note that some reporting verbs may appear in more than one of the following groups.
1. Verbs followed by 'if' or 'whether' + clause:
ask know remember | say see |
2. Verbs followed by a that-clause:
add admit agree announce answer argue boast claim comment complain confirm consider deny | doubt estimate explain fear feel insist mention observe persuade propose remark remember repeat | reply report reveal say state suggest suppose tell think understand warn |
3. Verbs followed by either a that-clause or a to-infinitive:
decide expect guarantee hope | promise swear threaten |
4. Verbs followed by a that-clause containing should
(but note that it may be omitted, leaving a subject + zero-infinitive):
(but note that it may be omitted, leaving a subject + zero-infinitive):
advise beg demand | insist prefer propose | recommend request suggest |
5. Verbs followed by a clause starting with a question word:
decide describe discover discuss explain forget guess | imagine know learn realise remember reveal say | see suggest teach tell think understand wonder |
6. Verbs followed by object + to-infinitive
advise ask beg command | forbid instruct invite | teach tell warn |
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