You're offline — cached pages and worlds still work
Drishti Innovations logo
Drishti Innovations

Icse Reporting Verbs

Direct & Indirect Speech — Icse Reporting Verbs

Icse Reporting Verbs

Reporting Verbs in Direct and Indirect Speech

What Are Reporting Verbs?

The reporting verb (or introductory verb) is the verb that introduces what someone said. It tells us how something was said, not just that it was said.

Common: said, told, asked, exclaimed, replied, shouted, whispered, promised, ordered, advised, warned, suggested, requested, insisted, denied, agreed, admitted, complained, announced

The Most Important Reporting Verbs

VerbUsageExample
saidGeneral reporting; no objectHe said that he was tired.
toldMust have an object (person told)She told me that she was tired.
askedQuestions / requestsHe asked if I was coming.
ordered / commandedCommands (authority)The teacher ordered us to be quiet.
requestedPolite commandShe requested him to wait.
advisedSuggestions (for benefit)The doctor advised me to rest.
warnedCaution against dangerHe warned us not to touch it.
exclaimedStrong emotionShe exclaimed that it was beautiful.
promisedCommitmentHe promised that he would return.
deniedDenying / refusingShe denied taking the money.
admitted / confessedAcknowledging truthHe admitted that he had lied.
suggestedIdeas / proposalsShe suggested going for a walk.
insistedStrong claimHe insisted that he was right.
complainedExpression of grievanceShe complained that the room was dirty.
announcedPublic declarationThe principal announced that school was closed.

Grammar Patterns with Reporting Verbs

Pattern 1: verb + that + clause

She said that she was happy. | He insisted that he was innocent.

Pattern 2: verb + object + that + clause

She told me that she was happy. | He reminded us that the test was on Monday.

Pattern 3: verb + to-infinitive

He agreed to help. | She refused to apologise. | They promised to come.

Pattern 4: verb + object + to-infinitive

She asked him to wait. | The teacher ordered us to sit. | He advised her to rest.

Pattern 5: verb + gerund (-ing)

She denied stealing. | He admitted breaking the window. | They suggested leaving early.

Pattern 6: verb + preposition + gerund

He insisted on doing it himself. | She apologised for being late.

Said vs Told — The Classic ICSE Error

WRONGCORRECT
He said me that...He told me that...
She told that...She said that...
He said to me that...He told me that... OR He said to me that... (formal, less common)

Rule: "told" ALWAYS needs a person object. "said" NEVER directly precedes a person.

Changing Reporting Verb in Indirect Speech

Different types of direct speech require different reporting verbs:

Direct Speech TypeReporting VerbIndirect Speech Structure
Statementsaid / toldsaid that + clause
Yes/No questionasked / enquiredasked if/whether + clause
Wh- questionasked / enquiredasked + wh-word + clause
Commandtold / ordered / askedtold + object + to-infinitive
Exclamationexclaimed / criedexclaimed that + clause
Requestrequested / askedrequested + object + to-infinitive

ICSE Practice

Change to indirect speech using an appropriate reporting verb:

  1. "Be quiet!" the teacher said to the students. → The teacher ordered the students to be quiet.

  2. "I will help you," he said to me. → He promised to help me. / He promised me that he would help me.

  3. "Don't touch the wire," she said to us. → She warned us not to touch the wire.

  4. "Why are you late?" he said to her. → He asked her why she was late.

Quick Check

  1. Fill in: "She ___ me that the shop was closed." (said/told)
  2. Which pattern does "suggested" follow? Write an example.
  3. Change: "I didn't steal the pen," he said.
  4. What is the difference between "asked" and "ordered" in indirect speech?
  5. Stretch: Write a paragraph using five different reporting verbs to report a conversation.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What Are Reporting Verbs?
  • The Most Important Reporting Verbs
  • Grammar Patterns with Reporting Verbs
  • Said vs Told — The Classic ICSE Error

Master this topic with Drishti OS

Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.

Start Free Practice