Say vs Tell in EnglishA2
Discover when to use 'say' versus 'tell' with clear rules, everyday examples, and practical practice to boost accuracy and confidence in speaking.
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Prerequisites
Shared Meaning
Both say and tell report speech, so they often appear in the same kinds of conversations. Learners confuse them because each can introduce words spoken by someone else, but the listener is positioned differently in the sentence. The main choice depends on whether the person receiving the information is named directly or whether the focus is on the words themselves. For a broader view of related reporting verbs, compare Direct Speech and Indirect Speech.
Use Tell
Tell normally takes a person as its indirect object, so it follows the pattern tell someone something. It is the natural choice when the listener is named directly, as in requests, instructions, stories, secrets, commands, and news. Tell is therefore more personal and more recipient focused than say. It also appears in fixed expressions such as tell the truth, and it often works well when the speaker wants the message to feel directed at one person. For a related comparison of speech verbs, see Say vs Speak.
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Use Say
Say normally reports the words or utterance itself, so it often appears with quoted speech or with a content clause. It is the better choice when the focus is on what was said rather than on the person receiving it. When a recipient is named, say usually needs to be followed by to, as in say something to someone. In direct quotation, say is the standard verb because the reported words are presented exactly as spoken. In speech reporting, Direct Speech and Indirect Speech show the two most common patterns.
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Overlap Patterns
Some sentences can work with either verb, but the focus changes. He said that he was leaving centers on the content of the statement, while He told me that he was leaving highlights the listener who received it. In informal speech, to may be dropped after say when the recipient is obvious, but the fuller pattern with to is the safest general form. Native speakers may also choose one verb over the other for rhythm, emphasis, or fixed phrasing, so usage is guided by pattern as well as meaning. The key test is simple: if the listener must be named directly, use tell; if the message is being reported, use say or say to.
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Key Takeaways
Say and tell both report speech, but they organize the sentence differently. Tell is ditransitive and normally takes a person directly, while say is more about the words and usually takes to when a recipient is mentioned. Quote speech with say, name a listener directly with tell, and use the simpler decision rule of direct recipient for tell and message focus for say. Reliable use comes from noticing whether the sentence points first to the listener or first to the utterance.