Explanation

  • Used ironically to express strong agreement with or shared understanding of someone's negative experience or complaint.
  • It means I know exactly what you mean because I've experienced it too, rather than asking for more details.

Origin

  • Likely evolved from the literal phrase tell me about it (meaning give me details) into an ironic expression of shared negative experience, probably in the mid-20th century.
  • The irony comes from the fact that you *don't* actually need them to tell you more, because you already understand perfectly.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • I feel you. (Expressing empathy)
  • Word. (Agreement, especially AAVE influence)
  • For real. (Agreement)

Milder:

  • Oh, I know the feeling.
  • Yes, it can be difficult. (More formal)
  • I understand completely.

Situational Appropriateness

  • Informal.
  • Suitable for conversations with friends, family, or colleagues you know well.
  • Avoid in very formal settings.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Non-native speakers might think you genuinely want more details about the problem, when you're actually expressing empathy and agreement.

Examples

  • A: Ugh, this traffic is terrible. B: Tell me about it. Took me an hour to get here.
  • A: My boss is driving me crazy with these last-minute requests. B: Tell me about it.

Dialogue

Sarah: My commute was brutal this morning. The train was delayed by 30 minutes.

Mark: Ugh, tell me about it. Mine was packed like sardines.

Sarah: Seriously! It's getting ridiculous.

Social Media Examples

  • Tweet: Trying to get concert tickets is a nightmare. Botched checkout, site crashing... 😭 Reply: Ugh, tell me about it! Took me 3 tries for the last tour.
  • Post: Anyone else exhausted by adulting today? 😴 Comment: Tell me about it. Just paid bills. Ouch.

Response Patterns

  • Often just met with a nod or a shared sigh.
  • The original speaker might elaborate slightly, acknowledging the shared feeling: Right? It's the worst.
  • Sometimes followed by the responder adding their own related complaint: Yeah, and yesterday...

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

After hearing Tell me about it:

  • The original speaker might feel validated and continue venting briefly or shift the topic slightly. Exactly! Anyway, how was your weekend otherwise?
  • The person who said Tell me about it might follow up with their own brief, related anecdote. Yeah, reminds me of last week when...

Conversation Starter

  • No.
  • It's always a response to someone else's statement, typically a complaint.

Intonation

  • Often delivered with a sigh or a slightly weary, drawn-out tone.
  • Emphasis is usually on Tell. TELL me about it.

Generation Differences

  • Widely used across many generations, though perhaps slightly more common from Gen X onwards.

Regional Variations

  • Common in most English-speaking regions, especially North America.
Preach