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"Say" and "said" as transitive and intransitive verbs

English Language & Usage Asked on June 16, 2021

I have an interesting question. Is “say” a transitive verb in the case of direct/reported speech? I understand that it can be a transitive verb in cases like “She said the phrase.” or “She says the words quietly.”. But what about:

Bob looked at his fried and said, “You are my best buddy.”
Or, “I know that,” said his friend.

My thought process on this is that the direct/reported speech instance is not representing the use of the verb “say” as transitive, as it is a separate dialogue tag with no direct object. However, I think this all moves into the realm of what we believe the role of speech is in grammatical structure in the first place, which I don’t know about you, but I have mixed thoughts on in the first place.

One Answer

Actually ,when we put "say", it means we try to say something to somebody. eg., When we say, she said to me..It means ,She said something to me..Here, "say" is a transitive verb..For our convenience ..We write or speak it like ..She said to me...Here 'something ' is dropped...Actually it is there in deep structure

Answered by Prof.Chahal on June 16, 2021

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