What are you trying to distort vs What are you trying to say

When to use each in English, with meaning, register, and examples.

What are you trying to distort

InformalBeyond 10,000 (less common)

What are you trying to say

Top 2,000 (common)
Most formal: What are you trying to sayMost common: What are you trying to say
 What are you trying to distortWhat are you trying to say
Pronunciation🇬🇧 //wɒt ɑː juː ˈtraɪɪŋ tuː dɪsˈtɔːt//🇺🇸 //wɑt ɑr ju ˈtraɪɪŋ tu dɪsˈtɔrt//🇬🇧 //wɒt ɑː jʊ ˈtraɪɪŋ tə seɪ//🇺🇸 //wʌt ɑr jʊ ˈtraɪɪŋ tə seɪ//
MeaningWhat do you want to change or misrepresent?What do you mean?
ExampleWhen she said her version of events, I couldn't help but ask, 'what are you trying to distort?'I didn't understand your point. What are you trying to say?
RegisterInformalNeutral
How commonBeyond 10,000 (less common)Top 2,000 (common)
Collocationstrying to distort the truth, distort someone's words, distort the factstrying to say something, what are you implying, trying to convey, trying to express
Antonyms-What are you trying to hide, What are you trying to imply, What are you trying to conceal
Common mistakesConfusing with 'what are you trying to prove' in context., Using in overly formal situations., Omitting 'are' in the question.Confused with 'What do you mean?', Incorrectly uses 'trying to say' in formal situations., Omission of 'you' in casual speech.
Usage notesUse casually when questioning someone's intentions. Avoid in formal settings as it may seem confrontational.'What are you trying to say?' is used to ask for clarification. It's neutral and appropriate in most contexts, but can sound confrontational if said sharply.

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What are you trying to distort
What are you trying to say

Frequently asked questions: What are you trying to distort vs What are you trying to say

What's the difference between What are you trying to distort and What are you trying to say?

What are you trying to distort: What do you want to change or misrepresent? What are you trying to say: What do you mean?

Which is more formal: What are you trying to distort and What are you trying to say?

What are you trying to say is the most formal of these.

Which is more common: What are you trying to distort and What are you trying to say?

What are you trying to say is the most common in everyday English.

Can you show an example of each?

What are you trying to distort: When she said her version of events, I couldn't help but ask, 'what are you trying to distort?' What are you trying to say: I didn't understand your point. What are you trying to say?

Can I use What are you trying to distort and What are you trying to say interchangeably?

Not always. What are you trying to distort and What are you trying to say are related and overlap in some contexts, but they differ in register, how common they are, and usage, so swapping one for another can change the meaning or tone. Check the differences above before substituting.

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