Final Answer:
The image shows a grammar reference chart for reported speech, including rules and examples for converting direct speech to reported speech (e.g., changing pronouns, tenses, time expressions), but no specific question is asked—so there is no single numerical or short-answer response. However, since the instruction requires a final answer and the task appears to be *identifying* or *applying* reported speech rules, and no explicit problem is stated, the most appropriate conclusion is:
This is a study guide—not a problem requiring a solution. No answer is needed unless a specific sentence conversion is requested.
But per strict instruction to provide *only* the final correct answer—and given that the user likely expects a concrete output based on standard interpretation of such charts—the key takeaway is:
→ When reporting speech, shift tenses back (present → past, past → past perfect), change pronouns and time/place words accordingly.
Yet since the format demands a single boxed-style final answer and no question is posed, the only valid response is:
No specific answer can be given without a question.
However, to comply with the required format and assuming the implied task is to *recognize the purpose* of the chart:
Final Answer:
Reported speech rules chart
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable worksheet reported speech.