He said to me ,"what are you doing"
To change the narration of an optative sentence started with 'if', you can convert it into a statement or a command depending on the context. For example, "If only I could go!" can be changed to "I wish I could go" or "I want to go."
Transformation of a direct assertive sentence into indirect narration involves reporting what someone said without using their exact words. The reported speech is usually introduced with a reporting verb, such as "said" or "told." The verb tense, pronouns, and adverbs may need to be changed to match the new context. Additionally, the word order may change, with reported questions becoming statements and reported commands becoming requests or suggestions.
To change an interrogative sentence into a declarative sentence, you can simply remove the question word (who, what, where, when, why, how) and rephrase the sentence as a statement. For example, change "Are you going to the store?" to "You are going to the store."
Every year, the leaves on the trees change color and fall to the ground during autumn.
To change a declarative sentence into an exclamatory sentence, simply add an exclamation mark at the end of the sentence. For example, changing "The sky is blue" to "The sky is blue!" adds an exclamatory tone to the statement.
To change an active sentence to passive, identify the object in the active sentence and make it the subject in the passive sentence. Move the subject of the active sentence to the phrase with "by" and change the verb to its past participle form. To change a passive sentence to active, identify the subject in the passive sentence and make it the subject in the active sentence. Use an appropriate active verb to describe the subject's action and add the original object of the passive sentence as the direct object in the active sentence.
Transformation of a direct assertive sentence into indirect narration involves reporting what someone said without using their exact words. The reported speech is usually introduced with a reporting verb, such as "said" or "told." The verb tense, pronouns, and adverbs may need to be changed to match the new context. Additionally, the word order may change, with reported questions becoming statements and reported commands becoming requests or suggestions.
In most cases it would be considered improper. Try rephrasing the sentence, for example: Her favorite colors are red, white, and blue. But she also likes gold. You could change the second sentence to: Also, she likes gold.
Yes, tense can change the meaning of a sentence by indicating the time at which the action occurred. For example, "I walk to school" (present tense) implies a routine action, while "I walked to school" (past tense) indicates it happened in the past. Different tenses can convey different nuances or interpretations of the same idea.
You "step back" out of first or third person and make things past tense and as if you were reporting to a newspaper or TV reporter.Example:Joe leaped up and caught the foul ball. This is direct narration.Indirect narration would be The foul ball was caught by Joe.
=See related link; buddhanet.net/audio-songs_english... on left, then click "Narration"=
'Change is permanent.'
make sentence "cultural"
it started as scambles
Noun sentence: Jane is nice.Pronoun sentence: She is nice.adjective sentence: Warm is nice.
state of change
means to change the structure of sentence
prevention is better then cure