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without further ado
Also, without more ado. Without more work, ceremony, or fuss. For example, Without further ado they adjourned the meeting and went home, or And now, without more ado, here is our speaker of the day. This idiom has one of the few surviving uses of the noun ado, meaning “what is being done.” (Another is much ado about nothing.) [Late 1300s]
Example Sentences
Washington: All right, well, without further ado, Mother of Dance Mark and Kathryn Hahn.
All right, without further ado, let’s get this episode started.
So, without further ado, here’s your step-by-step guide to risotto success.
All right, without further ado, here’s the next episode.
Thus, without further ado, a refresher on just some of the assertions that were made in 2020 and could very well be mimicked if Kamala Harris breaks the 270 electoral-vote mark at some point in the next week.
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