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indirect speech - complain, accuse, insist, appo ...
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Delimiter between question and answer:

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  • Each line maps to a question.
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“You ruined the plan!” (blame) - He ... me
He blamed me for ruining the plan.
“You forgot the keys!” (blame) - He ... me
He blamed me for forgetting the keys.
"You broke everything!” (blame) - He ... me
He blamed me for breaking everything.
“Amazing job on finishing early!” (congratulate) - He ... me
He congratulated me on finishing early.
“Great job on passing the test!” (congratulate) - He ... me
He congratulated me on passing the test.
“I’m sorry for making the mistake.” (apologise to her for) - He ...
He apologised to her for making the mistake.
“I’m sorry for shouting.” (apologise to him for) - He ...
He apologised to him for shouting.
“We must try again!” (insist on) - He ...
He insisted on trying again.
“We must follow the rule!” (insist on) - He ...
He insisted on following the rule.
“I must do it myself!” (insist on) - He ...
He insisted on doing it himself.
“Please let me pay!” (insist on - He ...
He insisted on paying.
“You cheated on the test!” (accuse) - He ...
He accused me of cheating on the test.
“You damaged the car!” (accuse) - He ...
He accused me of damaging the car.
“You stole the money!” (accuse) - He ...
He accused me of stealing the money.
“You lied to me!” (accuse) - He ...
He accused me of lying to him.
“You broke my phone!” (accuse) - He ...
He accused me of breaking his phone.
“You took my wallet!” (accuse - He ...
He accused me of taking his wallet.