Hello and welcome to Daily English — the podcast where language helps us understand life a little better.

Today’s expression is about honesty… but softened with kindness.

The idiom is: “sugarcoat the truth.”
 Imagine tasting bitter medicine.
 Now imagine someone adds honey to make it easier to swallow.
 People sometimes do this with words too —
 they sugarcoat the truth.
 What do you think it means?
 To sugarcoat the truth means to make something unpleasant sound gentler or nicer than it really is.

Let’s check some examples:

  1. The doctor didn’t want to sugarcoat the truth, so she explained the results clearly.


  2. He sugarcoated the truth by saying the project “needs work,” when it actually had serious problems.


  3. Some people sugarcoat the truth to protect our feelings, not to lie.


 Sometimes kindness needs honesty,
 and sometimes honesty needs softness.
 Not every truth has to cut —
 but it also shouldn’t hide.

 Do you prefer people who tell you the truth directly, or do you like it sugarcoated a little?