Last updated: 24 juin 2026
Le Discours Rapporté : Comment Rapporter la Parole Impeccablement en Français

Le Discours Rapporté: How to Report Speech Flawlessly in French
Introduction: The "He Said, She Said" Dilemma
In the TEF and TCF Speaking Section B (Convincing a friend) and Writing Section B (Formal letters), you will almost always find yourself wanting to quote someone else.
- "My doctor said it's safe."
- "The manager told me there is a discount."
To express this in French, you cannot simply translate word-for-word. You need (Reported Speech).
Part 1: Simple Context reporting (Present to Past)
If you are reporting something someone said in the present tense, and your reporting verb (dire, affirmer, expliquer) is in the absolute past, the quoted verb must shift to the Imparfait.
Part 2: Reporting Future Tense (The Conditionnel shift)
If someone promises something in the Future tense, and you report it in the past, the verb shifts to the Conditionnel Présent.
- Direct Speech:
Elle affirme : "Je viendrai demain."(She asserts: "I will come tomorrow")
Part 3: Reporting Questions (The Indirect Trap)
When reporting questions, the structure changes entirely. You NEVER use inversion.
1. Yes/No Questions (Si formulation)
- Direct:
"Est-ce que tu viens ?"(Are you coming?)
Conclusion: Practice Frame
To use reported speech effectively:
- Identify what was said over tense frames.
- Drop the
que/siconnector securely. - Shift the verb using the dynamic decision charts.
Add a couple of reported speech structures to your formal letters or speaking arguments to instantly display full C1 control index benchmarks securely!