reported speech - определение. Что такое reported speech
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Что (кто) такое reported speech - определение

IN CLINICAL TRIALS
Patient reported outcome; Patient Reported Outcome; Patient reported outcome measures; Patient-reported outcomes

reported speech      
Reported speech is speech which tells you what someone said, but does not use the person's actual words: for example, 'They said you didn't like it', 'I asked him what his plans were', and 'Citizens complained about the smoke'. (BRIT; in AM, use indirect discourse
)
= indirect speech
N-UNCOUNT
reported speech      
¦ noun a speaker's words reported in subordinate clauses governed by a reporting verb, with the required changes of person and tense (e.g. he said that he would go, based on I will go). Contrasted with direct speech.
Compelled speech         
TRANSMISSION OF EXPRESSION REQUIRED BY LAW
Compulsory speech
Compelled speech is a transmission of expression required by law. A related legal concept is protected speech.

Википедия

Patient-reported outcome

A patient-reported outcome (PRO) is a health outcome directly reported by the patient who experienced it. It stands in contrast to an outcome reported by someone else, such as a physician-reported outcome, a nurse-reported outcome, and so on. PRO methods, such as questionnaires, are used in clinical trials or other clinical settings, to help better understand a treatment's efficacy or effectiveness. The use of digitized PROs, or electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs), is on the rise in today's health research setting.

Примеры употребления для reported speech
1. Gore addressed the issue in a widely reported speech.
2. There are several new scenes, which existed only as reported speech in the 1'76 text.
3. This technique was brilliantly conveyed by Haddon in The Curious Incident through Christopher‘s swearing, which is pure and unjudgmental reported speech, and consequently hilarious.
4. Clarke‘s vision for the police workforce of tomorrow echoed many of the ideas contained in a little–reported speech that the Met commissioner, Sir Ian Blair, made just a month before the election.
5. Last week, it was the turn of David Cameron, the shadow education secretary and prospective Tory leader, to demonstrate how he has mastered the new orthodoxy – the politics of fear – in a widely reported speech in London.