He asked if/whether the matter could be postponed for a day or two.
He wanted to know whether it was possible to postpone the matter for....
He asked if it could be postponed for a day or two.
He asked whether the matter could be postponed
To convert direct sentences into indirect sentences, you typically need to change the pronouns, tense, and sometimes the word order to reflect the speaker's perspective. For example, "He said, 'I am going to the store'" could be changed to "He said that he was going to the store." Remember to introduce a reporting verb like "said that" or "told" to signal the change to indirect speech.
To turn direct speech into indirect speech, you typically change the pronouns, verb tenses, and sometimes the word order to reflect that the information is being paraphrased rather than directly quoted. For example, "She said, 'I am going to the store'" could be changed to "She said that she was going to the store."
To change first person direct speech to indirect speech, you would switch the pronouns and verb tenses to match the perspective of the speaker reporting the original speech. For example, "I am going to the store," would become "He said that he was going to the store."
The indirect speech act of the question "Can you drive the car?" is a request for the person's permission or willingness to drive the car, rather than just seeking information about their ability to drive.
To change a direct discourse question to an indirect one, you usually remove the question mark and adjust the sentence to make it a statement. For example, "Could you tell me where the library is?" would change to "He asked if I could tell him where the library was." Make sure to maintain the tense and pronouns.
The indirect speech act of the question "Can you drive the car?" is a request for the person's permission or willingness to drive the car, rather than just seeking information about their ability to drive.
To convert direct sentences into indirect sentences, you typically need to change the pronouns, tense, and sometimes the word order to reflect the speaker's perspective. For example, "He said, 'I am going to the store'" could be changed to "He said that he was going to the store." Remember to introduce a reporting verb like "said that" or "told" to signal the change to indirect speech.
Maybe, but it had already been postponed multiple times.
To change first person direct speech to indirect speech, you would switch the pronouns and verb tenses to match the perspective of the speaker reporting the original speech. For example, "I am going to the store," would become "He said that he was going to the store."
"His lawyer" could be a direct object or indirect object, but it could not be an adverb. In "He called his lawyer", "his lawyer" is a direct object. In "He showed his lawyer the contract", "his lawyer" is an indirect object.
The indirect object in the sentence is "the class." The teacher is the subject, "told" is the verb, "a story" is the direct object, and "the class" is the indirect object that receives the action of the verb indirectly.
It means that something that was to have been on at one time has been changed to a later time. So an appointment today could be postponed until next week. A morning appointment could be postponed until the afternoon.
indirect representation
yes, because you could be anybody, just yourself. Answer: An indirect object pronoun is "to" or "for" somebody, even if the words "to" and "for" are implied and not stated. "You" is the indirect object pronoun as it is being given "to you".
file:///C:/Users/miran/Downloads/Language%20Arts/8.8_Word_Attack_Worksheet.pdf
So Germany could build up its strength. Michael Montagne
I am [Your Name]. I am driven, ambitious, and passionate about making a positive impact in the world. I believe in the power of hard work, perseverance, and kindness to drive success and create meaningful change.