Introduction
Wh-questions (What, Why, When, Where, Who, How, etc.) require special handling during indirect speech conversion. Instead of using if/whether (used in Yes/No questions), Wh-words stay in the sentence and introduce the reported clause.
This pattern is important because many exam questions test your ability to convert Wh-questions accurately while preserving meaning.
Pattern: Reporting Wh-Questions
Pattern
Key concept: Keep the Wh-word, remove the question order, and convert to a normal statement.
- Wh-word stays the same (what/why/how/when...)
- No question order → use subject + verb (statement form)
- Use reporting verbs: asked, inquired
- Apply tense backshift where required
- Remove question marks
Step-by-Step Example
Question
Convert into Indirect Speech:
He said to me, “Where are you going?”
Solution
Step 1: Identify the Wh-word.
The sentence starts with Where.Step 2: Change reporting verb.
“said to me” → asked me.Step 3: Use statement order.
“are you going” → “I was going”.Step 4: Apply pronoun/tense changes.
I → speaker; “are going” → “was going”.Final Answer:
He asked me where I was going.Quick Check:
Wh-word kept + statement order used + backshift applied → correct. ✅
Quick Variations
1. “Why were you late?” → asked why he had been late.
2. “When will they come?” → asked when they would come.
3. “How did she solve it?” → asked how she had solved it.
Trick to Always Use
- Step 1 → Keep the Wh-word as it is.
- Step 2 → Change question order into statement order.
- Step 3 → Convert “said to” → “asked”.
- Step 4 → Apply tense/pronoun/time changes.
Summary
Summary
- Wh-word never changes in indirect speech.
- Do not use “if/whether” for Wh-questions.
- Use subject-verb order, not inversion.
- Always apply proper backshift and pronoun changes.
Example to remember:
“Why are you crying?” → He asked why I was crying.
