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I've been told you're gay vs I have heard you're gay

Both phrases are correct and can be used interchangeably. They both convey the same meaning that someone has informed the speaker that the person in question is gay.

Last updated: March 24, 2024 • 652 views

I've been told you're gay

This phrase is correct and commonly used in English.

This phrase is used when the speaker wants to convey that they have received information from someone else that the person in question is gay.
  • Who told you he was gay?
  • I've been told you have an anger management problem.
  • I've been told you dabble in sorting out... delicate domestic matters.
  • I've been told you're a highly esteemed consultant.
  • Twice now I've been told you were dead.
  • I've just been told you're trying to rouse the president out of his coma.
  • I've been told you speak our language, and that your name is Mr...
  • I've been told you have news about emily kramer.
  • I've been told you can't speed up the healing process.
  • Everyone knows I'm a drunk, and I've been told you can't make it to the white house on the back of a pink elephant.
  • I've been told you shot me brother Naomh whilst he was unarmed.
  • I've been told you visit medical 3 or 4 times a day asking about Clarke.
  • Though I've been told you're a woman who knows how to achieve the impossible.
  • I've always been told you've got to be prepared to walk away if you're not happy.
  • I don't know how to broach this, but I've been told you've been bothering people for money.
  • I've been told you've been forced to keep to your bunk
  • She had been told you died at birth.
  • We hadn't been told you were a doctor.
  • We've been told you're a keen amateur photographer, Jack.
  • I had not been told you were also bereaved.

Alternatives:

  • I have heard you're gay
  • Someone told me you're gay

I have heard you're gay

This phrase is correct and commonly used in English.

This phrase is used when the speaker wants to convey that they have received information from someone else that the person in question is gay.
  • I have heard you with unmistakable clarity.
  • I have heard you are an intelligent girl.
  • All I have heard you talking of this past week is winning.
  • I have heard you use those same words about yourself.
  • I have heard you are involved... in some real estate venture.
  • I have heard you mention them with consideration for the last twenty years.
  • Finally, again, something I have heard you, Mr President, talk about: the issue of legal advice.
  • There is not much support for this proposal in such circles, and I should like to have heard you say something to refute what I have just suggested.
  • Unfortunately, I have heard you say very little about these things here today.
  • I have heard you talk about a lot of people, but not the most important one...
  • I have heard you say that, and we're in agreement.
  • She is my reason for living, and you should understand... because I have heard you say that without reasons we cannot live.
  • I have heard you say, in a very easy way, that you would like the European voice to be unique on this issue.
  • But as I have heard you say, Commissioner Monti, you are still saying no.
  • Commissioner I have heard you saying, and I have heard Mr Barroso saying, that the stakeholders apparently tell you that there is no real problem.
  • Though I have heard you make positive points I have not heard you say you are in complete agreement.
  • I have heard you say that the reform, or deepening, of the European institutions is necessary in order to make a success of enlargement.
  • I have heard you say that a thousand times, Daedalus, and not once have I believed it.
  • I have heard you called by another name,
  • Okay, Lavon, so far today I have heard you compare Didi to a volcano, a bowl of grits, and Dash's pet cockatoo Pickles.

Alternatives:

  • I've been told you're gay
  • Someone informed me you're gay

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