He will say,"I am ill"in indirect speech SEE THE REPORTING VERB IS IN FUTURE TENSE
Answers
Answer:
Actually, except for the punctuation, you have the indirect-speech version already. Let’s take out the punctuation. Then: He said he was ill. A perfect example of indirect speech. With direct speech, what the person said is put in quotation marks. So your sentence in direct speech would be this:
He said, “I’m ill.”
The sentence above works as long as the person wasn’t referring to some time previous to his saying this. But if he was — if he was talking about some time previous to your conversation with him — then the direct-speech version would be this:
He said, “I was ill.”
With indirect speech, if the person was referring to being ill at some earlier time, as in the sentence just above, then the quoted part should be put in the past perfect tense (had + the past participle) for clarity:
He said he had been ill.
But again, if the person meant he was ill at the time he was talking to you, then the indirect-speech version would be what was noted in the first paragraph:
He said he was ill.
Hope it helps .
Answer:
to respected :
madam
note
im ill so i,cant come school today kindly grant me leave for only one day
date:2021 ,,,,,,
yours obiedendly:
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
thank you