Basics. Reported Questions and Commands

Reported Questions and Commands

Transforming direct questions and commands into reported speech requires careful attention to word order and verb forms. For example, the direct question "Where are you going?" becomes She asked where I was going (not where was I going), and the command "Don't move!" becomes He ordered me not to move. Notice how reported questions shift to statement word order, dropping auxiliary verbs like do or did, while reported commands rely on the infinitive form.

Inside, you'll tackle advanced indirect speech structures. You will need to choose the correct word order for reported wh- questions and yes/no questions, while also selecting the proper positive and negative infinitives for reported commands. The scenarios are packed with drama—from helping a baffled detective report on a squirrel suspect to translating a galactic commander's orders and recounting a head chef's kitchen meltdown.

You'll work through 10 questions using a mix of single-choice, multi-choice, drop-down, and drag-and-drop formats.

Try the quiz to check your knowledge!

Imperative mood

Imperative vs declarative: declarative states facts (The door is closed.). Imperative gives commands (Close the door.). The difference: imperatives have no stated subject and use the bare verb. Socially, bare imperatives can sound rude — politeness strategies (Could you close the door?) are often preferred.

The imperative mood = bare verb, no subject, for commands/instructions/requests. Negated with don't. Softened with please or modal questions.

Diagnostic: is the subject missing and the verb in base form? → imperative. Is there a stated subject + tense? → declarative or other mood.

Indirect speech

Direct vs indirect speech: direct speech quotes exact words (She said, "I am tired."). Indirect speech reports the meaning (She said she was tired.). The key difference is backshift — tenses move one step into the past when the reporting verb is past tense.

Indirect speech = reported words without quotation marks. Core mechanism: backshift (present→past, past→past perfect, will→would) + pronoun/time shifts.

Diagnostic: is the reporting verb past (said, told)? → backshift required. Is it present (says, tells)? → no shift needed. Exception: universal truths don't shift (He said the Earth is round).

Infinitive

Infinitive vs gerund: the #1 verb-pattern confusion. Some verbs take only infinitive (want to go ✅), some only gerund (enjoy going ✅), some both with different meanings (stop to smokestop smoking). No logical rule exists — learn by verb.

The infinitive = base verb form used non-finitely. To-infinitive (to go) after certain verbs. Bare infinitive (go) after modals and causatives.

Diagnostic: what's the main verb? Check whether it takes to-infinitive, bare infinitive, or gerund. If unsure, try both and see which sounds natural to native speakers.

Negation

Single vs double negatives: standard English uses ONE negative per clause (I don't see anything or I see nothing). Double negatives (I don't see nothing) are grammatical in many languages and some English dialects, but are non-standard in written/formal English. This is the #1 negation trap for speakers of Spanish, Russian, and French.

Negation = not after auxiliary/modal, or do-support. Negative words (never, nobody, nothing) negate alone without adding not.

Diagnostic: count the negatives in the clause. More than one? → double negative. Fix by replacing one with a positive (anything, anyone, ever).

Past tense

Simple past vs past perfect: simple past puts events on the main timeline (I arrived. She left.). Past perfect marks an event as earlier than another past event (She had left before I arrived). If all events are in sequence, simple past is enough. Only use past perfect when you need to show "earlier than the main story."

The past tense has four forms encoding different temporal relationships: simple past, past progressive, past perfect, past perfect progressive.

Diagnostic: are events in sequence? → simple past is fine. Need to show one event happened before another past event? → past perfect for the earlier one.

Questions

Direct vs indirect questions: direct questions invert and end with ? (Where does she live?). Indirect questions DON'T invert and end with a period (I wonder where she lives.). Mixing these up — I wonder where does she live? ❌ — is one of the most common structural errors.

Questions in English use inversion/do-support. Types: yes/no, wh-, negative, tag. Direct questions invert; indirect don't.

Diagnostic: is your question embedded inside a statement (I wonder, Do you know, Can you tell me)? → DON'T invert. Is it a standalone question? → invert.

Subjunctive mood

Subjunctive vs indicative: indicative states facts (He goes every day). Subjunctive marks unreality (I suggest he go; If I were you). The subjunctive drops the -s and insists on were — signalling "this isn't (or may not be) real." In informal speech it's disappearing, but formal/academic writing still expects it.

The subjunctive mood = hypothetical/counterfactual marker. Present subjunctive (base form after suggest/demand/insist that). Past subjunctive (were in unreal conditionals).

Diagnostic: is the clause about something unreal, demanded, or recommended (not yet true)? → subjunctive. Is it factual? → indicative.

Verb tense

Tense vs aspect: tense locates the action in TIME (past/present/future). Aspect describes its SHAPE — is it completed (perfect), ongoing (progressive), or just a fact (simple)? English combines these independently: was working = past (tense) + progressive (aspect). Confusing tense with aspect is why the 12-form grid feels overwhelming.

Verb tense = 3 time references × 3 aspects = 12 forms. Tense says when; aspect says how the action unfolds relative to that time.

Diagnostic: wrong time? → tense error. Right time but wrong "shape" (e.g., I work here for ten years instead of I've worked)? → aspect error.

Perfect tense

Present perfect vs simple past: I lost my keys (past: specific time, done). I have lost my keys (perfect: result matters NOW — I still don't have them). The perfect always connects past action to present relevance. If the time is specified (yesterday, in 2010) → simple past. If the result matters now → present perfect.

The perfect aspect = have + past participle. Marks completion relative to a time point. Three forms: present/past/future perfect.

Diagnostic: does the sentence mention a specific finished time (yesterday, last year, in 1999)? → simple past. Is it about the result/relevance NOW? → present perfect.

Word order

English (SVO) vs other patterns: English relies on word ORDER to show who does what (Dog bites manMan bites dog). Inflected languages (Latin, Russian, German) use case endings and can scramble order freely. In English, changing order changes meaning or requires special constructions (inversion, cleft sentences).

Word order = how English marks grammatical relationships. SVO is the default; fixed adjective order; adverb placement varies by type.

Diagnostic: does your sentence sound "off" even though all word forms are correct? → probably a word order issue. Try moving the element back to default SVO position.

C1 | Advanced

C1 vs C2: C1 means fluent and flexible use with occasional gaps in very unfamiliar domains. C2 means native-like command of idiom, irony, and register across any subject. If you can handle advanced grammar but still miss cultural nuance or very rare idioms, you're C1.

C1 is the advanced CEFR level: inversion, cleft sentences, subjunctive mood, advanced conditionals, and precise register control in professional and academic contexts.

Diagnostic: can you write persuasively in different registers and catch subtle irony? Consistently → C2. Sometimes → C1.

Hard

Hard vs Medium: Medium tests one rule with realistic distractors. Hard tests interacting rules, edge cases, or context-dependent answers where multiple options seem correct until you think deeply. If you're scoring 80%+ on Medium, try Hard to find your real gaps.

The Hard tag filters for B2+ challenges with layered difficulty: rule interactions, subtle distractors, and contexts that demand genuine grammatical reasoning.

Diagnostic: if Hard questions feel impossible, drop to Medium and master the individual rules first. Hard assumes you already know each rule — it tests whether you can apply them together.