He said to her, "Don't read so fast."
A. He told her not to read so fast.
B. He advised her don't read so fast.
C. He requested her not to read so fast.
D. He ordered her not to read so fast.
Answer: Option A
Solution (By Examveda Team)
This question is about converting Imperative Sentences from Direct Speech to Indirect Speech in the context of Voice.Imperative Sentences: These are sentences that give commands, make requests, or offer advice. In reported speech, imperative sentences are usually introduced with verbs like told, ordered, requested, advised, etc., depending on the tone of the command or request.
Structure in Reported Speech:
In negative imperative sentences, the structure becomes:
[Subject] + told/ordered/advised/requested + object + not to + base verb
Original Sentence (Direct Speech): He said to her, "Don't read so fast."
Step-by-step Breakdown:
1. "Said to" changes to "told" as it is a direct instruction.
2. The imperative "Don't read" becomes "not to read" in indirect speech.
3. The object "her" remains the same.
4. "So fast" remains unchanged.
Correct Transformation:
He told her not to read so fast.
Correct Answer: Option A: He told her not to read so fast.
Other Options:
Option B: He advised her don't read so fast. — ❌ Incorrect. The verb form is wrong; it should be "not to read", not "don't read" in reported speech.
Option C: He requested her not to read so fast. — ❌ Incorrect. "Requested" is too soft and doesn't match the neutral tone of the original instruction.
Option D: He ordered her not to read so fast. — ❌ Incorrect. "Ordered" implies a strict or authoritative tone, which is not evident in the original sentence.
Conclusion: The sentence that best captures the original meaning with correct grammar and tone is Option A.
This is an Imperative sentence and D is right one.