When turning direct questions into reported questions, the sentence structure changes to embed the question into a statement. This approach is suitable for conveying responses from individuals, including those who are famous, in an indirect manner.
Transforming direct questions into reported questions requires a change in the structure of the sentence to embed the question into a statement. In the context of interviewing someone famous, reported questions can help to convey their responses indirectly and can be particularly useful in articles or reports. Below are examples of how to turn the provided direct questions into reported questions:
Each of these reported questions provides an indirect way to relay the inquiry made, suitable for documenting interview responses or inclusive writing where the direct speech is not being used.
#SPJ2
(plz be more than one idea)
B.Lorne, the party planner, wanted to make sure the entire Jones Family was arriving on time from the Airport.
C.Lorne, the party planner, wanted to make sure the entire Jones family was arriving on time from the Airport.
D.Lorne, the Party Planner, wanted to make sure the entire Jones family was arriving on time from the airport.
Answer:
Lorne, the party planner, wanted to make sure the entire Jones family was arriving on time from the airport.
Explanation:
The first letter of the sentence is capitalized. Common nouns are NOT capitalized. Proper nouns (the names of specific people, places, organizations, and sometimes things) are capitalized. Titles preceding names, but not titles that follow names are capitalized.
We wore bright, summer dresses that were a light shade of yellow.
B.
We wore bright, summer, dresses that were a light shade of yellow.
C.
We wore bright summer dresses that were a light shade of yellow.
D.
We wore bright summer, dresses that were a light shade of yellow.