Reporting Past Events
When reporting what someone said in the past, we use the past tense of 'say' and 'tell'. Remember that 'tell' always needs an object (the person being told), while 'say' typically doesn't.
Time Changes in Past Reporting
When reporting past statements, the tense usually moves back one step: present → past, past → past perfect. For example: Direct: 'I am tired' → Reported: He said (that) he was tired
Context Variations
Past reporting is commonly used in storytelling, sharing news, describing conversations, and relaying messages. The structure remains consistent across these contexts.
Examples
Tom said he was going to the store.Using 'said' without an object to report a past statement
Sarah told me she had finished the project.Using 'told' with an object (me) to report a completed action
They said that the movie started at 8:00.Using 'that' optionally in past reporting
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Incorrect: He told he was busy.
✅ Correct: He told me he was busy.
Explanation: Tell always needs an object (person being told)
❌ Incorrect: She said me the answer.
✅ Correct: She told me the answer.
Explanation: Say doesn't take an indirect object – use tell instead
Tips for Success
- Always include a person object with 'tell'
- The word 'that' is optional in most cases
- Pay attention to tense changes when reporting past statements
- Use 'say to' if you need to specify who was spoken to with 'say'
Learning Path Notes
Key Concepts in This Series:
- Building on basic say/tell patterns
- Extending present tense knowledge to past reporting
- Maintaining object rules from previous lessons