Five Short Cut Tricks for Narration – Top Most Effective Narration
Tricks
In today’s world when everyone is
looking for effective and efficient exam notes as most important short cut
tricks that not only help to solve the questions quickly but also be easily
memorize by the candidates. They are targeting strategically to each part of
competitive examination rather than preparing for everything.
Thus, Narration is one of the
biggest parts in English Language and two to five questions are surely asked in
any of the competitive examination held for recruitment of most qualified, eligible
and suitable candidates for vacant post such as Clerk, Probationary Officer,
Assistant (Multipurpose) and others in IBPS, SBI, RRB etc.
NO TIME WASTE – SURE SUCCESS
Here we are discussing five top most
effective rules as Narration short cut Tricks that help you all to qualify the
examination by consuming a short time span. You are advised to memorize and
apply these rules to obtain high score in English Language.
Memorize Ten Top Most Effective Narration Short Cut Tricks
The Narration short cut tricks
are given as follows:
Short Cut Trick No. 1 - Form: Change direct form to indirect form
·
Say/ Says / Said – No Change
·
Say to – Tell
·
Says to – Tells
·
Said to – Told
Short Cut Trick No. 2 - Speech: Change direct speech to indirect
speech
·
Hence – Thence
·
Here – There
·
This – That
·
These – Those
·
Tonight – That Night
·
Today – That day
·
Tomorrow – The next day
·
Yesterday – The previous day/ the last day
·
Last day – The previous day / the day before
·
Ago – Before
·
Now – Then
Short Cut Trick No. 3 –Tense: Change of Tense as per follows
(Check Verb in the reporting speech):
Present Indefinite – Past
Indefinite
Present Continuous – Past
Continuous
Present Perfect – Past Perfect
Present Perfect Continuous – Past
Perfect Continuous
Past Indefinite – Past Perfect
Past Continuous - Past Perfect
Past Perfect - Past Perfect – No
Change
Short Cut Trick No. 4 – NO CHANGE: If Present / future tense are in
reporting speech, there will not be any change in tense of the sentence.
Direct Speech - My father says,
“I played well”.
Indirect Speech – My father says
that he played well.
Short Cut Trick No. 5 – HI-UP: If HI-UP is mentioned in reporting
speech, there would be no change in the tense in the narration.
HI-UP is stand for:
·
H – Habitual Action
·
I - Idiom Phrase
·
U – Universal Truth
·
P – Past Historical Fact