English, asked by anuragpoonia982, 4 days ago

I said to my Dad,"Please, come home early. indirect speech​

Answers

Answered by BrainlyZendhya
1

Answer:

I requested my dad, to come home early.

Explanation:

We know that the given sentence is in Imperative (command, order, request),

I said to my dad, "Please, come home early".

When we change this into indirect speech,

  • said to ⟶ commanded/ordered/requested

But as we have a Requesting type question here, we would use,

  • said to ⟶ requested
  • connecting word ⟶ to

Hence, the final result would be,

I requested my dad, to come home early.

More about this topic :

While changing a sentence from Direct to Indirect, it undergoes 5 changes.

1) Reporting verb :

For statement,

  • said to ⟶ told
  • says, said ⟶ will not change
  • say to ⟶ tell, says to ⟶ tells
  • connecting word ⟶ that

For Introgative,

  • said to ⟶ asked/demanded/questioned
  • connecting word ⟶ If/Whether for yes/no questions

For Imperative,

  • said to ⟶ commanded/ordered/advised/requested/warned
  • connecting word ⟶ 'to' for positive sentence, 'not to' for negative sentence.

For exclamatory,

  • said to ⟶ exclamed/exclamed with joy or sorrow/wished
  • connecting word ⟶ that

2)Add conjunction, remove commas and quotations :

  • Remove quotations, commas
  • Add full stops, question marks and exclamatory marks if needed.

3) Pronoun change :

  • I ⟶ He/She
  • We ⟶ They
  • You ⟶ He/She/They/I/Him/Her/Them
  • Us ⟶ Them
  • Me ⟶ Him/Her
  • Mine ⟶ Hers/His
  • Ours ⟶ Theirs
  • My ⟶ Her/His

4) Tense change :

  • Present ⟶ Past
  • Present continuous ⟶ Past continuous
  • Present perfect ⟶ Past perfect
  • Past ⟶ Past Perfect
  • Past continuous ⟶ Past perfect continuous
  • will/shall/can/may ⟶ would/should/could/might

5) Adverbial Change :

  • Today ⟶ That day
  • Tomorrow ⟶ the next day/the day after
  • Yesterday ⟶ the previous day/the day after
  • Last week/month/year ⟶ the previous week/month/year
  • next week/month/year ⟶ the week/month/year after
  • ago ⟶ before
  • thus ⟶ so
  • this/these ⟶ that/those
  • now ⟶ then
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