Reported Speech – Questions

B2 – Upper Intermediate

Reported Questions

Reported questions (also called indirect questions) are used to report what someone asked, without quoting their exact words.

  • Direct: She said, “Where are you going?”
  • Reported: She asked where I was going.

Structure 

A. Yes/No Questions → if / whether

When the original question can be answered with yes or no:

  • Direct: “Are you tired?”
  • Reported: He asked if I was tired.

Use:

  • if (more common)
  • whether (more formal)

B. Wh- Questions → Keep the question word

  • Direct: “Where do you live?”
  • Reported: She asked where I lived.
  • Direct: “Why did he leave?”
  • Reported: They asked why he had left.

Change in Word Order

In reported questions, there is no inversion (no question word order).

x: She asked where was I going.
o: She asked where I was going.


Changes in Tenses

When the reporting verb is in the past (asked, wondered, wanted to know), tenses usually shift back:

Direct QuestionReported Question
“Where is he?”She asked where he was.
“What are you doing?”He asked what I was doing.
“Did you finish?”She asked if I had finished.
“Will you come?”He asked if I would come.

Changes in Pronouns, Time, and Place

These often shift depending on context:

DirectReported
nowthen
todaythat day
tomorrowthe next day
herethere
I / youdepends on speaker

Example:

  • “Will you be here tomorrow?”
    → He asked if I would be there the next day.

Advanced Reporting Verbs

Instead of just asked, use more precise verbs:

  • inquire → formal
  • wonder → polite/uncertain
  • want to know → neutral
  • question → sometimes skeptical

Examples:

  • She wondered whether he was telling the truth.
  • They inquired how long the process would take.

Advanced Embedded Questions 

Reported questions can function inside longer sentences:

  • I don’t know where she went.
  • Can you tell me what he meant?
  • Do you remember why they canceled the meeting?

Note: There is still no inversion:
x:  Do you know where is he?

O: Do you know where he is?


Reporting Questions Without “ask”

Sometimes the question meaning is implied:

  • She wanted to know where I had been.
  • He was curious why they left early.
  • They were wondering if we could help.

Common Advanced Errors

x: He asked me where did I go.
o: He asked me where I went.

x: She asked if I am tired.
o: She asked if I was tired. (backshift)

x: They asked where is the station.
o: They asked where the station was.

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