Say
From Creolista!
Contents
[hide]Pronunciation
present tense: say: /seɪ/, rhymes with the letter A, and the words way, and weigh
- says: /sez/, rhymes with fez
past tense & past participle: said, /sed/, rhymes with bed
Semantics
The fourth most common verb in English (after the auxiliaries be, have, & do), it means speak or assert. (dire in French).
It is used in situations where a person sends a message through speech (or writing, n'en déplaise aux puristes).
Syntax
say or tell ?
- Say requires a sender and a message, i.e. what is said. (ce qui est dit, ou ce qu'on dit)
- Boris didn't say anything Boris n'a rien dit.
- . It is optional to mention the receiver of the message.
- . That person is introduced with the operator/preposition to.
- Boris didn't say anything to Lily. Boris n'a rien dit à Lily.
- Tell requires a sender and a receiver (destinataire) (whom, us, them, etc.).
- . Unlike with say,
tois not needed to introduce the receiver.
- Boris didn't tell Lily. Boris n'a pas informé Lily.
- . The optional direct object (COD) can be either a noun phrase (the answer, the truth, a lie, a story, ...) or an infinitival (to wait, to call back later... etc.)
- Boris didn't tell Lily anything. Boris n'a rien dit à Lily.
- Boris didn't tell Lily to do anything. Boris ne lui a pas dit de faire quoique ce soit.
reported speech
- say is most frequently (or at least very frequently) used to talk about "what was said" in the past. For direct quotes this presents no problem:
- They said "No way!"
- They said OK.
- They said no.
- Most often though, we transpose what was said into the past tense:
- Lily at the 10am meeting: I can't be here tonight, my flight is leaving at 7pm.
- Boris at the 6pm meeting: Lily said (that) she couldn't be here tonight because her flight was leaving at 7pm.
- Lily at the 10am meeting: I can't be here tonight, my flight is leaving at 7pm.
- If what was said was already in the past tense, we sometimes transpose to the past perfect.
tenses, aspects, modes
- Say is compatible with both present & past tenses, with perfective and imperfective (continuous) aspects, and with all of the English modal verbs.
- just sayin' = je dis ça, je dis rien. ^^