SPEAKING LESSONS
     English Speaking Basics
     Regular English Lessons
     Business English Lessons
     Interview English Lessons
     Travel English Lessons
   EXTRA LESSONS
     English Listening Lessons
     Pronunciation Lessons
     English Grammar Basics
     Idioms and Phrases
     English Vocabulary
     Full Lesson Index

<< Previous LessonNext Lesson >>
0:00
0:00

You've got to be kidding

Meaning/Usage: This is used when a true statement is ridiculous.

Explanation: "Kidding" is the same as joking. When a person hears something that is true, but it is not expected, the person will use this idiom to express that the statement is ridiculous.

A: "Hey Jared. Mom told me to tell you that you shouldn't stay out too late."
B: "You've got to be kidding me. I'm 30 years old."

A: "Patrick won the school election by two votes."
B: "He's not that popular how did this happen?"
A: "Nobody voted because they expected Jason to win."
B: "You've got to be kidding me."

Other Common Sentences

"I really hope you're wrong."
"Please tell me it ain't so."
COPYRIGHT © Napester