Narration: Direct & Indirect Speech

Narration: Direct & Indirect Speech

Understand how to report speech correctly with examples.

What is Narration?

Narration is the way we report what someone said. There are two main types:

  • Direct Speech – using the exact words of the speaker.
  • Indirect Speech – reporting the speech with changes in tense, pronouns, and time words.

Examples of Direct and Indirect Speech

Direct: She said, “I am tired.”
Indirect: She said that she was tired.
Direct: He said, “I will help you.”
Indirect: He said that he would help me.
Direct: They said, “We are going to the park today.”
Indirect: They said that they were going to the park that day.

Common Changes in Narration

  • Pronouns: I → he/she, you → me/him/her
  • Verb tense: present → past (am → was, will → would)
  • Time words: today → that day, tomorrow → the next day
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Narration: Direct and Indirect Speech

Narration: Direct and Indirect Speech

Narration refers to the method of reporting what someone has said. There are two types of narration:

  • Direct Speech
  • Indirect Speech (also called Reported Speech)

1. Direct Speech

In direct speech, the exact words spoken by the speaker are quoted and enclosed in quotation marks.

Example: She said, “I am going to the market.”

Characteristics of Direct Speech:

  • Uses quotation marks
  • First-person and present tense often used
  • Shows exact words of the speaker

2. Indirect Speech

In indirect speech, we report what someone said without quoting their exact words.

Example: She said that she was going to the market.

Changes when converting from Direct to Indirect:

  • Quotation marks are removed
  • Pronouns and tenses are usually changed
  • Reporting verbs like “said”, “told”, “asked” are used
  • Time and place words may also change

Examples of Conversion

Direct: He said, “I will help you.”
Indirect: He said that he would help me.
Direct: She said, “I am happy.”
Indirect: She said that she was happy.
Direct: John said, “I saw a lion yesterday.”
Indirect: John said that he had seen a lion the day before.

Tips for Changing Direct to Indirect Speech

  • Change pronouns appropriately
  • Shift the tense back (e.g., present → past)
  • Change time expressions (e.g., “today” → “that day”)
  • Use “that”, “if”, or “whether” to connect sentences