B2

Reported Speech in Persian

نقل قول

Overview

Reported speech, or indirect speech, conveys what someone else said without quoting them directly. In Persian, the conjunction که (ke, "that") introduces the reported content after verbs of saying, asking, or thinking. At the B2 level, mastering reported speech allows you to relay information, summarize conversations, and engage with news and narratives.

In formal Persian, tense backshifting occurs similarly to English: present becomes past, past becomes past perfect. However, colloquial Persian often preserves the original tense, relying on context to signal that the speech is reported. This makes the system somewhat more flexible than English reported speech.

Persian uses specific reporting verbs: گفتن (goftan, to say), پرسیدن (porsidan, to ask), جواب دادن (javāb dādan, to answer), فکر کردن (fekr kardan, to think), and فهمیدن (fahmidan, to understand/realize).

How It Works

Direct to indirect speech:

Direct Indirect Change
گفت: «می‌آیم.» (He said: "I'm coming.") گفت که می‌آید. (He said he was coming.) Person shift
پرسید: «می‌آیی؟» (She asked: "Are you coming?") پرسید آیا می‌آیم. (She asked whether I was coming.) Question form

Formal tense backshifting:

Original Tense Reported Tense
Present: می‌روم Imperfect: می‌رفت
Past: رفتم Past Perfect: رفته بود
Future: خواهم رفت می‌رفت (imperfect)

Examples in Context

Persian English Note
او گفت که فردا می‌آید. He said that he would come tomorrow. Reported statement
پرسیدم آیا می‌آیی. I asked whether you were coming. Reported question
گفت: «فردا می‌آیم.» He said: "I'll come tomorrow." Direct quote
جواب داد که نمی‌تواند. She answered that she couldn't. Reported answer
فکر می‌کردم که رفته است. I thought he had gone. Reported thought
شنیدم که ازدواج کرده. I heard that he/she got married. Hearsay
معلم گفت که امتحان آسان خواهد بود. The teacher said the exam would be easy. Formal
ازش پرسیدم کجا می‌ره. I asked him/her where he/she is going. Colloquial (no backshift)
خبر دادند که رئیس‌جمهور سخنرانی کرد. They reported that the president gave a speech. News
به نظرم گفت فردا نمیاد. I think he said he won't come tomorrow. Colloquial chain

Common Mistakes

Forgetting person shifts

  • Wrong: او گفت که من می‌آیم (he said that I come — wrong person)
  • Right: او گفت که (او) می‌آید (he said that he would come)
  • Why: When converting direct to indirect speech, pronouns must shift to match the new perspective.

Over-applying tense backshifting in colloquial speech

  • Wrong: Insisting on formal backshifting in casual conversation
  • Right: In spoken Persian, keeping original tenses is natural and common
  • Why: Colloquial Persian often preserves the original tense. Backshifting sounds formal.

Using quotation marks for indirect speech

  • Wrong: گفت که «می‌آیم» (mixing indirect with quotes)
  • Right: Either گفت: «می‌آیم.» (direct) or گفت که می‌آید (indirect)
  • Why: Choose one mode. Direct speech uses quotes and original wording; indirect uses که and shifted pronouns/tenses.

Usage Notes

Persian has a rich system of reporting verbs that carry different nuances: ادعا کردن (to claim), اعلام کردن (to announce), اظهار داشتن (to state), تأکید کردن (to emphasize). Using varied reporting verbs makes your speech and writing more precise and engaging at the B2 level.

The present perfect tense in Persian inherently carries a hearsay/reported quality (ماضی نقلی). Saying گویا رفته (apparently he went) signals reported information without any explicit reporting verb.

Practice Tips

  1. Take a short dialogue and convert it entirely to reported speech. Practice shifting pronouns, tenses, and question forms.
  2. Summarize a news story using reported speech: خبرنگار گفت که... (the reporter said that...), مقامات اعلام کردند که... (officials announced that...).
  3. Practice both registers: formal written with backshifting, and colloquial spoken without. Learn to switch between them naturally.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Relative Clauses with که in PersianB1

More B2 concepts

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