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Web-ÜbersetzerVerb-KonjugatorDer Die Das nachschlagenUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
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Definition of "tell" in Englisch

verb

  1. (transitive, archaic outside of idioms) To count, reckon, or enumerate.

    • All told, there were over a dozen.  Can you tell time on a clock?  He had untold wealth.
  2. (transitive, ditransitive) To narrate, to recount.

    • I want to tell a story;  I want to tell you a story.
  3. (transitive, ditransitive) To convey by speech; to say.

    • Finally, someone told him the truth.  He seems to like to tell lies.
    • Tell her you’re here.
  4. (transitive) To instruct or inform.

    • Please tell me how to do it.
  5. (transitive) To order; to direct, to say to someone.

    • Tell him to go away.
  6. (transitive or intransitive) To discern, notice, identify or distinguish.

    • Can you tell whether those flowers are real or silk, from this distance?  No, there's no way to tell.
    • I can tell you're upset.
    • An expert can tell an original from a forgery.
    • Whether she loves me or loves me not / Sometimes it's hard to tell
  7. (transitive) To reveal.

    • Time will tell what became of him.
  8. (intransitive) To be revealed.

    • Cherry looks old, Mergenthaler told himself. His age is telling. Querulous — that's the word. He's become a whining, querulous old man absorbed with trivialities.
  9. (intransitive) To have an effect, especially a noticeable one; to be apparent, to be demonstrated.

    • Sir Gerald was moving slower; his wounds were beginning to tell.
  10. (transitive) To use (beads or similar objects) as an aid to prayer.

  11. (intransitive, childish) To inform someone in authority about a wrongdoing.

    • I saw you steal those sweets! I'm telling!
  12. (authorship, intransitive) To reveal information in prose through outright expository statement — contrasted with show.

    • Maria rewrote the section of her novel that talked about Meg and Sage's friendship to have less telling and more showing.

noun

  1. A reflexive, often habitual behavior, especially one occurring in a context that often features attempts at deception by persons under psychological stress (such as a poker game or police interrogation), that reveals information that the person exhibiting the behavior is attempting to withhold.

  2. (informal) A giveaway; something that unintentionally reveals or hints at a secret.

  • (archaic) That which is told; a tale or account.

    • April 4, 1743, Horace Walpole, letter to Sir Horace Mann I am at the end of my tell.
  • (Internet) A private message to an individual in a chat room; a whisper.

  • noun

    1. (archaeology) A hill or mound, originally and especially in the Middle East, over or consisting of the ruins of ancient settlements.