In indirect speech, the pronoun "your" changes to "her" because it refers to Amna.
The verb "said" is changed to "ordered" as it is a command.
You asked him why he had called you names the previous day.
In indirect speech, the question changes to a statement.
"Did you call" changes to "he had called."
"Yesterday" changes to "the previous day."
Direct Speech: "You must take this medicine daily."
In Indirect Speech, "must" for obligation usually changes to "had to".
"You" becomes "I" when the speaker (listener in the original) is reporting their own obligation.
He said that they cannot read that chapter in ten minutes.
In indirect speech, present tense ("are") changes to past tense ("was").
The word "now" changes to "then" in reported speech.
Direct Speech repeats or quotes the exact words spoken by someone, often enclosed in quotation marks.
Example: She said, "I am going to the market."
He asked me whether I would help him is correct.
In indirect speech, a yes/no question with "will" changes to "would," and "will you" is converted to "whether I would" to report the question accurately.
Direct speech:
"Please sit down," he said.
Correct indirect speech:
He asked her to sit down
She requested her sister to help her in completing her assignment.
"Said to" with "please" changes to "requested" in indirect speech.
Pronouns change appropriately: me → her, keeping the meaning intact.
He asked her if she had not gone to the market.
In indirect speech, interrogative sentences change into statements using "if" or "whether" for yes/no questions.
The verb tense changes from past simple ("Did you not go") to past perfect ("had not gone") while maintaining the meaning.