It would normally be 'he is saying', as you would only use 'he is telling' if the sentence is 'he is telling me how to do everything' or 'he is telling me a lovely story'.
Saying "Happy Holidays" to someone is politically correct because not everyone celebrates the same holiday. Saying "Happy Holidays" will be less offending than telling someone "Merry Christmas" who does not celebrate Christmas.
Telling is the correct spelling.
no saying melting pot is not a bad thing because you are telling people that they are all different people but we are all human beings. it is telling that we are all together as one.
moose
bellowing, telling,
Telling is act of saying about something what one already know. Asking is the act of inquiring about something one has/needs to know. An example of telling is "Your book is lying there". An example of asking is "Did you see my book".
They are both correct. Lists is a plural and list is a singular. So saying: "Here are the lists is saying you have plural lists. While saying: "Here is the list" is saying you have only one list.
Both are correct.
Two can be correct; one is not correct.Have you got anything to tell me is a correct question.Have you got anything telling me is an incorrect use of the word telling.Have you got anything, tell me is a correct question if you add a comma after the word anything.
The correct spelling is hypocrisy (saying one thing and doing another).
you can only tell the truth if you are saying a fact or a opinon, a question can not be true or false, so i know your not telling either as you are saying a neutral question
There is one way to tell if someone is telling the truth or not: Lie detectors. Although not always 100% accurate, it measures your heartbeat whilst saying something and then comes to a conclusion about your truthfulness.