Needless to Say

Needless to say means “obviously, unnecessary to mention”.

Example:
Barb: Hey, Rob! How are things with you and Sandy?
Rob: Oh, you haven’t heard yet? We broke up….
Barb: What? What do you mean? What happened?
Rob: Well, I went to New York for work last month.
Barb: Yes, I remember that much. You were there for 2 weeks, right?
Rob: Well, I was supposed to be there for 2 weeks, but they needed me back in LA after a week, so I came back a week earlier.
Barb: OK… Then what?
Rob: Well, I got home and Sandy was… She was…
Barb: She was, what???
Rob: Well, she was eating all my expensive chocolate. She knew that no one touches my chocolate!
Barb: That’s so lame, Rob! Come on!
Rob: Well, she knew it, Barb! No one eats my chocolate! I got really upset and started to yell at her. Needless to say, she left and said she would never want to see me again…
Barb: I don’t blame her, Rob… You are so weird!

This idiom was taken from our LSI book, Reading Horizons! For more information, please visit: www.languagesystems.com

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