Indirect Statements - AMCHS Latin
amchslatin.weebly.com/indirect-statements.htmlIt's easier to understand this when you look at examples of direct statements compared to indirect statements. Direct Statement Indirect Statement Trogdor is a dragon. Strong Bad says that Trogdor is a dragon. Maximus killed the gladiator. Commodus knows that Maximus killed the gladiator. You ran faster than the lion.
INDIRECT STATEMENT (ORATIO OBLIQUA
https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/101/IndirectSpeech.pdfINDIRECT STATEMENT (ORATIO OBLIQUA) General: The statement “He scatters dragon’s teeth on the land” is a direct statement (ōrātiō recta): Dentēs dracōnis in terrā spargit.But after words of saying, denying, announcing, telling, showing, knowing, not knowing, believing, thinking, hearing, seeing, feeling, hoping, fearing, and
Indirect Quotation Examples
examples.yourdictionary.com › indirect-quotationFor example, a direct quotation would look like this: Lexi said, "It's time to eat!" An indirect quotation would look like this: Lexi announced it was time to eat. In this example, there would be little reason to use the direct quotation, you don't lose any of the meaning of the statement by quoting it indirectly.
Indirect Statements - AMCHS Latin
amchslatin.weebly.com › indirect-statementsIn the indirect statement, Trogdor's still a dragon - no change there at all - but you're hearing about it secondhand (indirectly), from Strong Bad, instead of being told directly. In English, you frequently see the word "that" signaling an indirect statement: "Strong Bad saidthat Trogdor was a dragon." However, that's not always the case.