Kalimat Langsung Dan Kalimat Tak Langsung
Bilamana
reported speech menyatakan kata-kata yang sebenarnya, ini disebut direct speech
(kalimat langsung). Kalimat-kalimat tersebut tidak dihubungkan oleh “that”
melainkan harus ditandai dengan (tanda baca) koma.
Bilamana
reported speech memberikan isi pokok kata-kata yang dipakai oleh si pembicara
dan bukan kata-kata yang sebenarnya ini disebut indirect speech (kalimat tidak
langsung). Dalam indirect speech kalimat-kalimat itu dihubungkan dengan kata
“that”.
Bentuk
waktu reporting verb tidak diubah, akan tetapi bentuk waktu reported speech
harus diubah berdasarkan atas bentuk waktu reporting verb.
Dua
cara perubahan bentuk waktu pada reported speech :
Peraturan
I
Kalau reporting verb itu past tense, bentuk waktu kata kerja
dalam reported speech itu harus diubah ke dalam salah satu dari empat bentuk
past tense.
Direct
Speech - Indirect Speech
Simple
present - menjadi - Simple past
Dari contoh di atas dapat disimpulkan perubahan untuk bentuk
waktu dari reported speech sebagai berikut :
Direct Speech
Simple present
Present continuous
Present perfect
Present perfect continuous
Simple past
Past continuous
Future
Present
|
Indirect Speech
Simple past
Past continuous
Past perfect
Past perfect continuous
Past perfect
Past perfect continuous
Past
Past
|
Kekecualian
:
Kalau reported speech berhubungan dengan kebenaran umum atau
fakta yang sudah menjadi
kebiasaan,
present indefinite atau simple present dalam reported speech tidak diubah ke
dalam
bentuk
lampau yang sesuai, melainkan tetap persis sebagaimana adanmya, contoh :
Direct
Speech - Indirect Speech
He
said, “The sun rises in the east” - He said that the sun rises in the east
Dalam reported speech, bila present tense diubah ke dalam
past tense dengan peraturan I, kata sifat, kata kerja atau kata keterangan
umumnya diubah:
Direct Speech
this = ini
these = ini
come = datang
here = di sini, ke sini
hence = dari sini
hither = ke tempat ini
ago = yang lalu
now = sekarang
today = hari ini
tomorrow = besok
yesterday = kemarin
last night = tadi malam
next week = minggu depan
thus = begini
contoh :
He said, “I will come here”.
|
Indirect Speech
that = itu
those = itu
go = pergi
there = di sana, ke sana
thence = dari sana
thither = ke tempat itu
before = lebih dahulu
then = pada waktu itu
that day = hari itu
next day = hari berikutnya
the previous day = sehari sebelumnya
the previous night = semalam sebelumnya
the following week = minggu berikutnya
so = begitu
He said that he would go there
|
Akan tetapi
kalau this, here, now dan sebagainya menunjukan pada benda, tempat atau waktu
ketika berbicara, maka tidak dilakukan perubahan.
Agus
said, “This is my pen”. - Agus said that this was his pen
(ketika
berbicara pena berada di tangan pembicara)
Peraturan
II
1)
Bila reported speech kalimat berita
Dengan peraturan ini reporting verb dianggap dalam present
atau future tense tertentu dan kapan saja ini terjadi, bentuk waktu dari kata
kerja dalam reported speech tidak diubah sama sekali dalam mengubah direct
menjadi indirect speech.
Reporting
verb - Reported speech
Present
tense - Any tense (bentuk waktu apapun)
Direct
: She says to her friend, ” I have been writing “.
Indirect
: She says to her friend that he has been writing. (tidak berubah)
Direct
: She has told you, ” I am reading “.
Indirect
: She has told you that he is reading. (tidak berubah)
Direct
: She will say, ” You have done wrongly “.
Indirect
: She will tell you that you have done wrongly. (tidak berubah)
Direct
: She will say,” The boy wasn’t lazy “.
Indirect
: She will tell them that the boy wasn’t lazy. (tidak berubah)
2)
Bila reported speech merupakan kalimat tanya
a) Reporting verb say atau tell diubah menjadi ask atau
inquire. Dengan mengulangi kata tanya dan mengubah tenses jika pertanyaannya
dimulai dengan kata tanya diberitakan.
Direct
He said to me, “Where are you going?”
He said to me, “What
are you doing?”
|
Indirect
He asked me where I was going
He inquired of me what I was doing
|
b) Dengan menggunakan if atau whether sebagai penghubung
antara reporting verb dan reported speech dan mengubah tenses, jika
pertanyaannya dimulai dengan kata kerja diberitakan :
Direct
He said to me, “Are you going
away today?”
He asked me , “can you
come along?”
|
Indirect
He asked me whether I was
going away that day.
He asked me if I could come along.
|
3)
Kalimat perintah (imperative sentences)
Bila reported speech merupakan kalimat perintah, reporting
verb say atau tell harus diubah menjadi kata kerja tertentu yang menandakan :
· command (perintah), misalnya ordered, commanded, dsb
yang berarti menyuruh, memerintahkan.
· precept (petunjuk, bimbingan, didikan), misalnya advised
yang berarti menasehati.
· request (permohonan), misalnya asked yang berarti meminta,
memohon.
· entreaty (permohonan yang sangat mendesak), misalnya begged
yang berarti meminta, memohon (dengan sangat).
· prohibition (larangan), misalnya forbade yang berarti
melarang.
Dalam perubahannya dari kalimat langsung menjadi kalimat
tidak langsung, modus imperatif harus diganti dengan infinitif. Tegasnya,
reported verb (kata kerja yang diberitakan atau kata kerja dalam reported
speech) harus diubah menjadi infinitive with to.
a)
Command :
Direct:
He said to his servant, “Go away at once!”
Indirect:He
ordered his servant to go away at once
b)
Precept :
Direct:
She said to her son, “Study hard!”
Indirect:
He advised her son to study hard
c)
Request :
Direct: He said to his friend, “Please
lend me your pen!”
Indirect: He asked his friend to be kind
enough to lend him his pencil
d)
Entreaty :
Direct:
He said to his master, “Pardon me, sir”
Indirect:
He begged his master to pardon him.
e)
Prohibition :
Direct:
She said to her daughter, “Don’t go there”
Indirect:
She forbade her daughter to go there
Kalau reporting verb say atau tell diubah menjadi reported
verb ask, order, command dsb (tapi jika bukan forbid), predikatnya diubah ke
dalam infinitive with to yang didahului oleh not atau no + infinitive with to.
Direct:
She said to her daughter, “Don’t go there”
Indirect:
She asked herdaughter not to go there.
4)
Kalimat seru (exclamatory sentences)
Bilamana
reported speech terdiri dari kalimat seru atau kalimat optatif, reporting verb
say
atau
tell harus diubah menjadi kata kerja tertentu yang semacam itu seperti exclaim,
cry out,
pray
dsb.
a)
Exclamatory sentences
Direct:
He said, “Hurrah! My old friend has come”
Indirect:
He exclaimed with joy that his old friend had come.
b)
Optative sentences (kalimat yang menyatakan harapan, pujian, dsb)
Direct:
He said, “God bless you, my dear son “
Indirect:
He prayed that God would bless his dear son
Direct and Indirect Speech
When
using indirect or reported speech, the form changes. Usually indirect speech is
introduced by the verb said, as in I said, Bill said,
or they said. Using the verb say in this tense, indicates that something was
said in the past. In these cases, the main verb in the reported sentence is put
in the past. If the main verb is already in a past tense, then the tense
changes to another past tense; it can almost be seen as moving even further
into the past.
Verb tense changes also characterize other situations using
indirect speech. Note the changes shown in the chart and see the table below
for examples. With indirect speech, the use of that
is optional.
Direct Speech
|
Þ
|
Indirect Speech
|
simple present
He said, “I go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
simple past
He said (that) he went to school every day. |
simple past
He said, “I went to school every day.” |
Þ
|
past perfect
He said (that) he had gone to school every day. |
present perfect
He said, “I have gone to school every day.” |
Þ
|
past perfect
He said (that) he had gone to school every day. |
present progressive
He said, “I am going to school every day.” |
Þ
|
past progressive
He said (that) he was going to school every day. |
past progressive
He said, “I was going to school every day.” |
Þ
|
perfect progressive
He said (that) he had been going to school every day, |
future (will)
He said, “I will go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
would + verb name
He said (that) he would go to school every day. |
future (going to)
He said, “I am going to school every day.” |
Þ
|
present progressive
He said (that) he is going to school every day. |
|
past progressive
He said (that) he was going to school every day |
|
Direct Speech
|
Þ
|
Indirect Speech
|
auxiliary + verb name
He said, “Do you go to school every day?” He said, “Where do you go to school?” |
Þ
|
simple past
He asked me if I went to school every day.* He asked me where I went to school. |
imperative
He said, “Go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
infinitive
He said to go to school every day. |
*Note than when a Yes/No question is being asked in direct speech, then
a construction with if or whether is used. If a WH question is being asked,
then use the WH to introduce the clause. Also note that with indirect speech,
these are examples of embedded questions.
The situation changes
if instead of the common said another part of
the very to say is used. In that case the
verb tenses usually remain the same. Some examples of this situation are given
below.
Direct Speech
|
Þ
|
Indirect Speech
|
simple present + simple present
He says, “I go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
simple present + simple present
He says (that) he goes to school every day. |
present perfect + simple present
He has said, “I go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
present perfect + simple present
He has said (that) he goes to school every day. |
past progressive + simple past
He was saying, “I went to school every day.” |
Þ
|
past progressive + simple past
He was saying (that) he went to school every day. |
|
past progressive + past perfect
He was saying (that) he had gone to school every day. |
|
future + simple present
He will say, “I go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
future + simple present
He will say (that) he goes to school every day. |
Another situation is
the one in which modal constructions are used. If the verb said is used, then the form of the modal, or
another modal that has a past meaning is used.
Direct Speech
|
Þ
|
Indirect Speech
|
can
He said, “I can go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
could
He said (that) he could go to school every day. |
may
He said, “I may go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
might
He said (that) he might go to school every day. |
might
He said, “I might go to school every day.” |
|
|
must
He said, “I must go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
had to
He said (that) he had to go to school every day. |
have to
He said, “I have to go to school every day.” |
|
|
should
He said, “I should go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
should
He said (that) he should go to school every day. |
ought to
He said, “I ought to go to school every day.” |
Þ
|
ought to
He said (that) he ought to go to school every day. |
While not all of the possibilities have been listed here, there are
enough to provide examples of the main rules governing the use of indirect or
reported speech. For other situations, try to extrapolate from the examples
here, or better still, refer to a good grammar text or reference book.
Some other verbs that
can be used to introduce direct speech are: ask, report, tell, announce,
suggest, and inquire. They are not used interchangeably; check a grammar or
usage book for further information
Direct Speech / Quoted Speech
Saying exactly what someone has said is called direct
speech (sometimes called quoted speech)
Here what a person says appears within quotation marks
("...") and should be word for word.
For example:
She said, "Today's lesson is on presentations."
or
"Today's lesson is on presentations," she said.
Indirect speech (sometimes called reported speech), doesn't
use quotation marks to enclose what the person said and it doesn't have to be
word for word.
When reporting speech the tense usually changes. This is
because when we use reported speech, we are usually talking about a time in the
past (because obviously the person who spoke originally spoke in the past). The
verbs therefore usually have to be in the past too.
For example:
Direct speech
|
Indirect speech
|
"I'm going
to the cinema", he said.
|
He said he was
going to the cinema.
|
As a rule when you report something someone has said you go
back a tense: (the tense on the left changes to the tense on the right):
Direct
speech
|
|
Indirect
speech
|
Present
simple
She said, "It's cold." |
›
|
Past
simple
She said it was cold. |
Present
continuous
She said, "I'm teaching English online." |
›
|
Past
continuous
She said she was teaching English online. |
Present
perfect simple
She said, "I've been on the web since 1999." |
›
|
Past
perfect simple
She said she had been on the web since 1999. |
Present
perfect continuous
She said, "I've been teaching English for seven years." |
›
|
Past
perfect continuous
She said she had been teaching English for seven years. |
Past
simple
She said, "I taught online yesterday." |
›
|
Past
perfect
She said she had taught online yesterday. |
Past
continuous
She said, "I was teaching earlier." |
›
|
Past
perfect continuous
She said she had been teaching earlier. |
Past
perfect
She said, "The lesson had already started when he arrived." |
›
|
Past
perfect
NO CHANGE - She said the lesson had already started when he arrived. |
Past
perfect continuous
She said, "I'd already been teaching for five minutes." |
›
|
Past
perfect continuous
NO CHANGE - She said she'd already been teaching for five minutes. |
Modal verb forms also sometimes change:
Direct
speech
|
|
Indirect
speech
|
will
She said, "I'll teach English online tomorrow." |
›
|
would
She said she would teach English online tomorrow. |
can
She said, "I can teach English online." |
›
|
could
She said she could teach English online. |
must
She said, "I must have a computer to teach English online." |
›
|
had to
She said she had to have a computer to teach English online. |
shall
She said, "What shall we learn today?" |
›
|
should
She asked what we should learn today. |
may
She said, "May I open a new browser?" |
›
|
might
She asked if she might open a new browser. |
!Note - There is no change to; could, would, should, might
and ought to.
Direct speech
|
Indirect speech
|
"I might
go to the cinema", he said.
|
He said he
might go to the cinema.
|
You can use the present tense in reported speech if you
want to say that something is still true i.e. my name has always been and will
always be Lynne so:-
Direct speech
|
Indirect speech
|
"My
name is Lynne", she said.
|
She said
her name was Lynne.
or
She said
her name is Lynne.
|
You can also use the present tense if you are talking about
a future event.
Direct speech
(exact quote)
|
Indirect speech
(not exact)
|
"Next week's
lesson is on reported speech ", she said.
|
She said
next week's lesson is on reported speech.
|
If the reported sentence contains an expression of time,
you must change it to fit in with the time of reporting.
For example we need to change words like here and yesterday
if they have different meanings at the time and place of reporting.
Today
|
+ 24 hours -
Indirect speech
|
||||
"Today's
lesson is on presentations."
|
She said
yesterday's lesson was on presentations.
|
||||
Expressions
of time if reported on a different day
|
|||||
this
(evening)
|
›
|
that
(evening)
|
|||
today
|
›
|
yesterday
...
|
|||
these
(days)
|
›
|
those
(days)
|
|||
now
|
›
|
then
|
|||
(a week)
ago
|
›
|
(a week)
before
|
|||
last
weekend
|
›
|
the
weekend before last / the previous weekend
|
|||
here
|
›
|
there
|
|||
next
(week)
|
›
|
the
following (week)
|
|||
tomorrow
|
›
|
the
next/following day
|
|||
In addition if you report something that someone said in a
different place to where you heard it you must change the place (here) to the
place (there).
For example:-
At work
|
At home
|
"How
long have you worked here?"
|
She asked me
how long I'd worked there.
|
In reported speech, the pronoun often changes.
For example:
Me
|
You
|
"I teach
English online."
|
She said she teaches English online.
|
Said, told and asked are
the most common verbs used in indirect speech.
We use asked to report questions:-
For example: I asked Lynne what time the lesson
started.
We use told with an
object.
For example: Lynne told me she
felt tired.
!Note - Here me is the object.
We usually use said
without an object.
For example: Lynne said she was
going to teach online.
If said is used with an object we must include to ;
For example: Lynne said to me that
she'd never been to China.
!Note - We usually use told.
For example: Lynne told me that
she'd never been to China.
There are many other verbs we can use apart from said, told
and asked.
These include:-
accused, admitted, advised, alleged, agreed, apologised,
begged, boasted, complained, denied, explained, implied, invited, offered,
ordered, promised, replied, suggested and thought.
|
Using them properly can make what you say much more
interesting and informative.
For example:
He asked me to come to the party:-
He invited
me to the party.
|
He begged
me to come to the party.
|
He ordered
me to come to the party.
|
He advised
me to come to the party.
|
He
suggested I should come to the party.
|
In reported speech, the word that
is often used.
For example: He told me that he
lived in Greenwich.
However, that is optional.
For example: He told me he lived in Greenwich.
!Note - That is never used in questions, instead we often use if.
For example: He asked me if I would come to the party.

DIRECT AND INDIRECT SPEECH

BY : 1.ROY INDRA RACHMAT
2. M.YOSA SIGIT GUSTAMA
3. IMAM BUDIONO
4. YAN RIZALDI MUSTAFID
5.
6.
7.
SMA NEGERI 1 MOGA
JL.Camping Sight Telp. ( 0284 ) 583449
Banyumudal
Moga – Pemalang 52354
TAHUN 2010 / 2011
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