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			           Exercises
			9 Indirect speech: sentences with must, needn’t and have to
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			must
			(first person)
			 
			
			‘I
			must’ can remain unchanged but
			usually becomes had to
			though would have to
			is better for an obligation which has only just arisen or is likely
			to arise in the future.
			 
			
			Reading
			the letter he said, ‘Good heavens! I must go at once!’
			 
			
			He
			said, ‘If she     gets worse I must stay with her.’
			 
			
			These
			would become respectively:
			 
			
			He
			said that he’d have to go and 
			
			 
			
			He
			said that he’d have to stay.
			 
			
			‘must
			I?’ usually becomes
			had to.
			 
			
			‘I
			must not’ usually remains unchanged.  
	
         
        Student  
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			must
			(second and third persons)
			 
			
			‘you/he
			must’ usually remains unchanged.
			 
			
			‘must
			you/he?’ usually becomes had to.
			 
			
			‘you/he
			must not’ remains unchanged or
			becomes weren’t to/wasn’t to.
			
			
			 
			
			must
			used for permanent commands or prohibitions or to express advice
			always remains unchanged, 
			
			 
			
			must
			used to express deduction never changes.
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			needn’t
			 
			
			‘I
			needn’t’ can change to didn’t
			have to/wouldn’t have to in the same
			way that ‘I must’ changes
			to ‘had to/would have to,
			but it very often remains unchanged.
			 
			
			‘you/he
			needn’t’ usually remains unchanged.
			 
			
			‘need
			I/you/he?’ remains unchanged or
			becomes had to.
			 
			
			 
			 
			
			have
			to
			 
			
			Forms
			with have to follow the usual rules.. Remember that ‘had
			to’ in direct speech will become had had to in indirect:
			 
			
			He
			said, ‘After the lecture I had to rush home.’
			 
			
			He
			said that after the lecture he had had to rush home.
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			Put
			the following into indirect speech.
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			1
			He said, ‘If what you say is true
			I must go to the police.’
			 
			
			2
			He said, ‘I must be at the docks
			at six a.m. tomorrow.’
			 
			
			3
			‘Must you make such a noise?’
			he asked.
			 
			
			4
			‘You mustn’t come in without
			knocking,’he told us.
			 
			
			5
			‘Your ticket will cost £5,’ I
			said.
			 
			
			‘In
			that case,’ said my nephew, ‘I must go to the bank tomorrow.’
			 
			
			6
			Park notice: Dogs must be kept on a
			lead.
			 
			
			7
			His
			father said, ‘Tom must work harder next term.’
			 
			
			8
			‘You needn’t come in tomorrow,’
			said my employer. ‘Take the day off.’
			 
			
			9
			‘I must go to the dentist
			tomorrow,’ he said. ‘I have an appointment.’
			 
			
			10
			Notice: Passengers must not lean out
			of the window.
			 
			
			11
			He said, ‘There must be someone in
			the house; there’s smoke coming from the chimney.’
			 
			
			12
			She said, ‘When you are a big boy
			you’ll have to tie your own shoes,’
			 
			
			13
			‘Port wine must never be shaken,’
			my wine-merchant said.
			 
			
			14
			‘He hasn’t had anything to eat
			since breakfast; he must be starving,’ she said.
			 
			
			15
			The official said, ‘This passport
			photo isn’t like you at all. You must have another one taken.’
			 
			
			16
			‘You mustn’t play with knives,
			children,’ said their mother.
			 
			
			17
			‘I needn’t get up till nine
			tomorrow,’ I said.
			 
			
			18
			Railway regulations: Passengers must
			be in possession of a valid ticket before travelling.
			 
			
			19
			‘How did you get your bulldog up
			the escalator?’ I said.
			 
			
			‘I
			carried him,’ said Tom.
			 
			
			‘You
			must be very strong,’ I said admiringly.
			 
			
			20
			‘You mustn’t tell anyone what
			I’ve just told you,’ she said to me.
			 
			
			21
			‘Need I eat it all, mummy?’ said
			the child.
			 
			
			‘Yes,
			dear, you must,’ she said.
			 
			
			22
			‘I had to drive your pigs out of
			my garden,’ she said.
			 
			
			23
			‘Sticks and umbrellas must be left
			at the desk,’ said the notice m museum.
			 
			
			24
			‘Must you do it all tonight?
			Couldn’t you leave some for tomorrow, asked her.
			 
			
			25
			‘When you go through Bayeux you
			must see the tapestry,’ he told me.
			 
			
			26
			He said, ‘You must walk faster;
			you are far too slow.’
			 
			
			27
			‘You mustn’t forget to put the
			stamp on or your friend will have to - pay double postage,’ he told
			me.
			 
			
			28
			‘I needn’t tell you how grateful
			I am,’ he said.
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			          Exercises
			10 Indirect speech to direct speech 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			Put
			the following into direct speech with the appropriate punctuation.
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			1
			She asked if he’d like to go to
			the concert and I said that I was sure she would.
			 
			
			2
			She told me to look where I was
			going as the road was full of holes and was very badly lit.
			 
			
			3
			They said that while they were
			bathing they saw someone examining their clothes.
			 
			
			4
			I asked if she had looked
			everywhere and she said that she had.
			 
			
			5
			He suggested giving her a bottle of
			wine.
			 
			
			6
			He said that the new carpet had
			arrived and asked where he was to put it.
			 
			
			7
			He said that two days previously an
			enormous load of firewood had been dumped at his front gate and that
			since then he hadn’t been able to get his car out.
			 
			
			8
			They offered me some more wine and
			I accepted.
			 
			
			9
			He said that if I found the front
			door locked I was to go round to the back.
			 
			
			10
			She asked the burglars who they were
			and who had let them in. They told her to sit down and keep quiet
			unless she wanted to get hurt.
			 
			
			11
			He asked what the weather had been
			like during my holiday and I said that it had been awful.
			 
			
			12
			He suggested going down to the
			harbour and seeing if they could hire a boat.
			 
			
			13
			He said that if I didn’t like
			escalators I could go up the emergency staircase. I thanked him and
			said that I would do that.
			 
			
			14
			He suggested that Tom and I should
			go ahead and get the tickets.
			 
			
			15
			He said that he thought my electric
			iron was unsafe and advised me to have it seen to.
			 
			
			16
			He said that if war broke out he
			would have to leave the country at once.
			 
			
			17
			I asked him if he had enjoyed
			house-hunting and he said that he hadn’t.
			 
			
			18
			She said that she was surprised to
			see that the grandfather clock had stopped and asked if anyone had
			been fiddling with it.
			 
			
			19
			She said that she had tried to ring
			up her mother several times on the previous day but had not succeeded
			in getting through.
			 
			
			20
			I asked her if she’d like to
			borrow the book but she thanked me and said that she had already read
			it and hadn’t liked it very much.
			 
			
			21
			He wanted to know if I was going to
			the dance and suggested that we should make up a party and go
			together.
			 
			
			22
			I told her to stop making a fuss
			about nothing and said that she was lucky to have got a seat at all.
			 
			
			23
			The clerk in the booking office
			inquired if I wanted a single or return ticket. I asked if a return
			was any cheaper. He said it made no difference.
			 
			
			24
			My employer hoped I would not be
			offended if he told me that, in his opinion, I would do better in
			some other kind of job.
			 
			
			25
			The AA man told the woman that if
			her wheels had gone a couple of inches nearer the edge, the car would
			have plunged into the ravine.
			 
			
			26
			He said I mustn’t mind if the
			first one wasn’t any good.
			 
			
			27
			He asked the crowd if they thought
			that he was a liar dnd the crowd shouted that they did.
			 
			
			28
			I stopped a man in the street and
			asked him to help me with my car. The man asked if it would take
			long, explaining that he was on his way to catch a train.
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			
			 
			 
			
			 
			 
			
			     
	
         
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						Answers
						
						 
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						Exercise 9 1
						said that if what she said was true he would have to go/must go 2
						said that he had to/would have to/must be . .. the following day 3
						asked if he had to make 4
						told us that we mustn’t come 5
						told my nephew that his ticket would cost... he said ... he would
						have to go ... the next day 6
						The park notice said that dogs must be kept 7
						said that Tom must/would have to work 8
						said that I needn’t come in the following day and told me to
						take 9
						said he had to/must go ... the following day as he had 10
						The notice said that passengers must not lean 11
						said that there must be . .. because there was smoke 12
						told him that when he was ... he would have to tie his 13
						said that port wine must never be shaken 14
						said he hadn’t had . . . and that he must be 15
						said that the passport photo
						wasn’t like her and that she must have/would have to have 16
						told the children that they must not 17
						said that I needn’t/wouldn’t have to/didn’t have to get up
						till nine the next day 18
						The railway regulations said passengers must be
						19 asked (Tom) how he had got his
						dog ... He/Tom said that he had carried him. I said that he must
						be 20
						said that I mustn’t/wasn’t to tell anyone what she had just
						told me 21
						asked (his mother) if he had to/need eat it all and she said that
						he must/had to 22
						said that she had had to drive his pigs out of her garden 23
						The notice said that sticks . . . must be left 24
						asked her if she had to do it all that night or if she couldn’t
						leave some for the following day 25
						told me that when I went through Bayeux I must see 26
						said that I must walk faster, I was far too slow 27
						told me that I mustn’t forget... or my friend would have to pay
						28 said
						that he needn’t tell me how grateful he was
						 
						
						Exercise 10 1
						‘Would he like to go to the concert?’
						she asked, ‘I’m sure he would,’ I said. 2
						‘Look where you are going,’ she said to me; ‘the road is
						full of holes and very badly lit.’ 3
						‘While we were bathing,’ they said, ‘we saw someone
						examining our clothes.’ 4 ‘Have
						you looked everywhere?’ I asked. ‘Yes,’ she said. 5
						‘Let’s give her/what about
						giving her a bottle of wine?’ he said.
						6 ‘The new carpet has arrived.
						Where am I to put/shall I put it?’ he asked.
						7 ‘An enormous load of firewood
						was dumped at my front gate two days ago. Since then I haven’t
						been able to get my car out,’ he said. 8
						‘Have some more wine?’ they said. ‘Yes, please,’ I
						replied. 9 ‘If
						you find the front door locked, go round the back,’ he said to
						me. 10
						‘Who are you?’ she asked the burglars, ‘And who let you in?’
						‘Sit down and keep quiet,’ they replied, ‘unless you want to
						get hurt.’ 11
						‘What was the weather like during your holiday?’ he asked. ‘It
						was awful,’ I answered. 12
						‘Let’s go down to the harbour and see/What about going down .
						.. and seeing if we can hire a boat?’ he suggested. 13
						‘If you don’t like escalators,
						you can go up the emergency staircase,’ he told me. ‘Thank
						you, I’ll do that,’ I said. 14
						‘What about Tom and you going
						ahead and getting the tickets?’ or ‘Suppose you and Tom go
						ahead and get the tickets?’ he said to me. 15
						‘I think your electric iron is unsafe. I advise you to have it
						seen to’ or ‘I should have it seen to’ or ‘Why don’t you
						have it seen to?’ he said to me. 16
						‘If war breaks/broke out, I shall/should have to leave the
						country at once,’ he said. 17 ‘Did
						you enjoy house hunting?’ I asked him. ‘No,’ he said. 18
						‘I am surprised to see that the
						grandfather clock has stopped. Has anyone been fiddling with it?’
						she asked. 19 ‘I
						tried to ring up my mother several times yesterday, but I didn’t
						succeed in getting through,’ she said. 20
						‘Would you like to borrow this book?’ I asked her. ‘I have
						read it already, thank you, and didn’t like it very much.’ 21
						‘Are you going to the dance? Let’s make up a party and go
						together’ or ‘What about making up a party and going
						together?’ he said. 22 ‘Stop
						making a fuss about nothing! You are lucky to have got a seat at
						all,’ I told her. 23
						‘Do you want a single or a return ticket?’ asked the clerk in
						the booking office. ‘Is a return any cheaper?’ I asked. ‘It
						makes no difference,’ he said. 24
						‘I hope you won’t be offended,’
						my employer said, ‘if I tell you that in my opinion you would do
						better in some other kind of job.’ 25
						‘If your wheels had gone a couple of inches nearer the edge,
						madam,’ said the AA man, ‘the car would have plunged into the
						ravine.’ 26 ‘You
						mustn’t mind if the first one isn’t any good,’ he said to
						me. 27
						‘Do you think I am a liar?’ he asked the crowd. ‘Yes!’
						they shouted. 28
						Stopping a man in the street, I asked, ‘Would/could you help me
						with my car?’ ‘Would/will it take long?’ asked the man. ‘I’m
						on my way to catch a train.’
						 
						
						 
						
						 
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