0
Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Need to say "quote and unquote" or back-shift?

Hi, I think in informal talking situations, the back-shifting for the reported speech is not needed and what is below is proper or correct. Am I on the mark on this?

Jack: When I was in the get-together, Janny said she hated to see John at the meeting last time at XXX's.

You don't need to say these:

Jack: When I was in the get-together, Janny said (quote and unquote) she hated to see John at the meeting last time at XXX's.

Jack: When I was in the get-together, Janny said she hated to see John at the meeting last time at XXX's. -- If I am not mistaken, a person should back-shift words like "hate" or "like" that involves feelings eventhough a situation might require it. Right?

If I make it more simple (as I see it to be) like this:

Jack:When I was in the get-together, Janny said she saw John at the meeting last time at XXX's.

This doesn't need to be either of this when speaking informally I think:

Jack: When I was in the get-together, Janny said (quote and unquote) she hated to see John at the meeting last time at XXX's.
Jack: When I was in the get-together, Janny said she had seen John at the meeting the last (previous??) time at XXX's.


  

Top answer

I don't quite understand what you are asking us here. If you are asking if you have to say the words 'quote, unquote' in reported speech - no you shouldn't. People sometimes use this when they are being sarcastic, but you shouldn't use it in normal contexts.

  • I don't quite understand what you are asking us here.
  • If you are asking if you have to say the words 'quote, unquote' in reported speech - no you shouldn't.
  • People sometimes use this when they are being sarcastic, but you shouldn't use it in normal contexts.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
I don't quite understand what you are asking us here.

If you are asking if you have to say the words 'quote, unquote' in reported speech - no you shouldn't. People sometimes use this when they are being sarcastic, but you shouldn't use it in normal contexts.

Related Questions