B2

Reported Speech in Basque

Zehar Estiloa

Overview

Reported speech (indirect speech) allows you to convey what someone else said, thought, or asked without quoting them directly. At the B2 level, this is essential for news, storytelling, academic writing, and everyday conversation where you relay information. Basque uses the suffix -la on the subordinate verb to mark reported statements, and may require tense shifts similar to those in English.

The basic pattern is: reporting verb + content clause with -la suffix. For example, "He said he will come" becomes Esan du etorriko dela — where dela is da (is) + -la (that).

Basque also has a unique feature for hearsay: the particles omen and ei, which indicate that information is second-hand — something you heard but did not witness yourself.

How It Works

Direct to indirect speech:

Direct Indirect Translation
"Bihar etorriko naiz." Esan du bihar etorriko dela. He/She said he/she will come tomorrow.
"Arrazoi duzu." Uste dut arrazoi duzula. I think you are right.
"Nor da?" Galdetu du nor den. He/She asked who it is.

Reporting verbs:

Verb Meaning Example
esan say/tell Esan du... -la
uste izan think Uste dut... -la
galdetu ask Galdetu du... -n
jakin know Badakit... -la
pentsatu think Pentsatzen dut... -la

Hearsay particles:

Particle Meaning Example
omen reportedly (heard from someone) Euria egingo omen du. (They say it will rain.)
ei reportedly (variant) Ona ei da. (It is supposedly good.)

Tense shifts in reported speech:

Direct speech Reported (present reporting) Reported (past reporting)
"Pozik naiz." ...pozik dela (is happy) ...pozik zela (was happy)
"Etorriko naiz." ...etorriko dela (will come) ...etorriko zela (would come)

Examples in Context

Basque English Note
Esan du bihar etorriko dela. He/She said he/she will come tomorrow. Standard reported speech
Uste dut arrazoi duzula. I think you are right. Opinion as reported thought
Euria egingo omen du. It will reportedly rain. Hearsay with omen
Galdetu du nor den. He/She asked who it is. Reported question
Jakin dut etorri dela. I have learned that he/she has come. Knowledge report
Esan zuen ez zuela nahi. He/She said he/she didn't want to. Past reported speech
Ona omen da film hori. That film is supposedly good. Hearsay recommendation
Pentsatzen dut egokia dela. I think it is appropriate. Reported opinion
Galdetu zidan nongoa nintzen. He/She asked me where I was from. Past reported question
Esan zidaten berandu zela. They told me it was late. Past tense report

Common Mistakes

Forgetting -la in reported statements

  • Wrong: Esan du etorriko da.
  • Right: Esan du etorriko dela.
  • Why: Reported statements require the -la suffix on the auxiliary of the reported clause.

Using -la for reported questions (instead of -n)

  • Wrong: Galdetu du nor dela.
  • Right: Galdetu du nor den.
  • Why: Reported questions use -n (the relative/interrogative suffix), not -la. The distinction mirrors English: "He said that..." vs. "He asked who..."

Incorrect tense shift

  • Wrong: Esan zuen pozik dela. (past reporting with present tense in report)
  • Right: Esan zuen pozik zela. (past reporting with past tense in report)
  • Why: When the reporting verb is in the past (esan zuen), the reported clause typically shifts to past tense too: dela → zela, duela → zuela.

Usage Notes

The hearsay particles omen and ei are distinctively Basque and have no direct English equivalent. They are placed after the element they modify (often before the auxiliary): Ona omen da (It is supposedly good). Using omen signals that you did not witness the information firsthand — an important distinction in Basque pragmatics. News reporting frequently uses omen for unconfirmed reports. In spoken Basque, omen is very common and adds a layer of epistemic marking that English achieves only through longer phrases like "reportedly" or "I heard that."

Practice Tips

  1. Report five things someone told you today: Esan du... -la. Practice with different reporting verbs.
  2. Convert direct quotes to indirect speech, paying attention to tense shifts and person changes.
  3. Use omen in five sentences about things you have heard but not personally verified.

Related Concepts

前置概念

Subordinate ClausesB1

更多 B2 级概念

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