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 ]

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  • Wises

    verb (used with or without object), Archaic. 1. to know. adjective, wiser, wisest. 1. having the power of discerning and judging properly as to what is true or right; possessing discernment, judgment, or discretion. 2. characterized by or showing such power; judicious or prudent: a wise decision. 3. possessed of or characterized by scholarly knowledge […]

  • Wiser

    adjective, wiser, wisest. 1. having the power of discerning and judging properly as to what is true or right; possessing discernment, judgment, or discretion. 2. characterized by or showing such power; judicious or prudent: a wise decision. 3. possessed of or characterized by scholarly knowledge or learning; learned; erudite: wise in the law. 4. having […]

  • Without so much as

    With not even, as in She stormed out without so much as a goodbye. [ Mid-1600s ]

  • With reference to

    Also, with regard or respect to . See in regard to

  • Withstand

    verb (used with object), withstood, withstanding. 1. to stand or hold out against; resist or oppose, especially successfully: to withstand rust; to withstand the invaders; to withstand temptation. verb (used without object), withstood, withstanding. 2. to stand in opposition; resist. verb -stands, -standing, -stood 1. (transitive) to stand up to forcefully; resist 2. (intransitive) to […]


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