Explanation

  • To confess or reveal the truth about something that has been kept secret, hidden, or denied, especially something wrong, embarrassing, or dishonest.
  • Often implies revealing the full story or all the relevant hidden facts.

Origin

  • Figurative language. 'Clean' symbolizes honesty, purity, and openness.
  • To 'come clean' means to emerge from a state of secrecy, deceit, or denial ('dirtiness') into a state of truthfulness ('cleanness'), effectively washing away the hidden wrongdoing by revealing it.
  • Appears to have gained currency in the early 20th century.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Spill it / Spill the tea (Reveal gossip or truth, 'tea' is slang for gossip/truth)
  • Lay it all out
  • Tell the real story / Gimme the real story
  • Get it off your chest
  • Keep it real (Be honest)

Vulgar/Emphatic (Demanding the truth forcefully):

  • Tell the fucking truth!
  • Stop lying and come clean, asshole!
  • Cut the bullshit and tell me what happened.

Milder/Formal:

  • Be truthful / Be honest
  • Disclose the full information
  • Confess / Make a full confession
  • Provide a truthful account
  • Set the record straight

Situational Appropriateness

  • Can range from informal (e.g., friends urging honesty about a relationship issue) to semi-formal or even formal (e.g., in legal or investigative contexts, public apologies).
  • Generally carries a more serious connotation than 'fess up', often implying a more significant secret or wrongdoing.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Generally clear.
  • The implication is usually about admitting something significant that was previously hidden or denied, not just sharing any random piece of information.

Examples

  • After weeks of lying, he finally came clean to his wife about losing his job.
  • The politician had to come clean about the secret donations when the emails were leaked.
  • If you cheated on the test, it's better to come clean to the teacher now.

Dialogue

Detective: We have evidence placing you at the scene, Mr. Jones. Your initial story doesn't hold up. It's time to come clean.

Suspect: (Sighs heavily) Alright... alright. It wasn't supposed to happen like that. Let me tell you what really went down.

Detective: Start from the beginning.

Social Media Examples

  • News Headline Example: CEO Forced to Come Clean About Misleading Sales Figures.
  • Relationship Advice Blog Post: Is it time to come clean to your partner about your debt? Experts weigh in.
  • Tweet: Feeling guilty about something I did. Maybe it's time to just come clean and face the music. #honesty #confession

Response Patterns

  • If someone is urged to 'come clean': They might confess, continue to deny, deflect, or become defensive.
  • If someone *has* 'come clean': Responses depend heavily on the nature of the revelation and the relationship – relief, anger, disappointment, understanding, questioning, discussion of consequences.

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

  • After someone 'comes clean', listeners often ask follow-up questions for more details (How long has this been going on?, Why didn't you tell me sooner?).
  • If encouraging someone, one might add persuasive statements like You'll feel better if you just come clean, or The truth always comes out eventually.

Conversation Starter

  • No. Used when demanding or encouraging honesty about a specific hidden truth or wrongdoing.

Intonation

  • Often used when encouraging or demanding confession, so the tone can be serious, persuasive, or insistent.
  • Stress typically on come and clean: COME CLEAN.
  • When describing someone *having* come clean, the tone might be neutral or relieved.

Generation Differences

  • Widely understood and used across generations. Standard idiom.

Regional Variations

  • Common in all major English-speaking regions.
Fess up