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  1. Dictionary
    telling-off
    /ˌtɛlɪŋˈɒf/

    noun

    • 1. a reprimand: informal British "your dad gave me such a telling-off"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. TELLING-OFF definition: 1. the act of speaking angrily to someone because they have done something wrong: 2. the act of…. Learn more.

  3. If you give someone a telling-off, you tell them that you are very angry with them about something they have done.

  4. to speak angrily to someone because they have done something wrong: The teacher told me off for swearing. Fewer examples. Mum told me off for slopping water all down her shirt. If you make your sister cry, you'll get told off. Their teacher told them off for chattering in the lesson. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  5. noun. /ˌtelɪŋ ˈɒf/ /ˌtelɪŋ ˈɔːf/ [usually singular] (plural tellings-off) (British English, informal) the act of speaking angrily to somebody, especially a child, because they have done something bad. The nurse gave him a telling-off for smoking in the hospital. Topics Education c2, Life stages c2. Take your English to the next level.

  6. If you tell someone off, you speak to them angrily or seriously because they have done something wrong. I'm always getting told off for being late. American English : tell off / tɛl ˈɒf /

  7. Define telling-off. telling-off synonyms, telling-off pronunciation, telling-off translation, English dictionary definition of telling-off. noun reprimand, talking-to, row, criticism, lecture, rocket , wigging , slating , censure, rebuke, reproach, scolding, ticking-off , dressing-down ,...

  8. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ˌtelling-ˈoff noun (plural tellings-off) [ countable usually singular] British English the act of telling someone that they have done something wrong I’ve already had one telling-off from Dad this week. → tell off.