he said be quiet and listen to my words. change it to indirect speech
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He asked me to be quite and listen to his words .
prof345:
he commanded me to be quite and listen to his words.
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Answer:
He ordered to be quiet and listen to his words.
Explanation:
- A grammatical device for describing the content of another utterance without directly quoting it is known as indirect speech in linguistics. It is also known as reported speech or indirect discourse. Jill stated she was coming, which is indirect discourse, as opposed to Jill saying "I'm coming," which is direct conversation.
- It was implied that you had a headache the day before yesterday. "It has been pouring since this afternoon," you say. He stated in an indirect manner that it had been pouring since that afternoon. "I haven't seen them since last week," I said in the third person.
- In indirect speech, words frequently contain referents that are more appropriate for the context in which the reporting act occurs than for the context in which the speech act being reported occurred (or is conceived as taking place).
Thus this is the answer.
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