Yadda Yadda

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Yadda Yadda means to ignore or skip over a boring or unimportant part of a conversation or story. It is often used when someone is summarizing or talking about something that they find uninteresting or repetitive. Here are two examples of how it can be used:

1. A: “Yesterday I went to the store, bought some groceries, cooked dinner, and then watched a movie.”
B: “Did anything interesting happen during all that?”
A: “No, not really. Just the usual yadda yadda.”

2. A: “I have been working on this project for weeks. It requires a lot of research, data collection, analysis, and report writing.”
B: “Wow, sounds like a lot of work! Can you tell me more about it?”
A: “Not really, it’s mostly yadda yadda.”

When someone wants to skip telling the unimportant parts of a story:
A: “I went to the party, met some friends, danced for a while, and then yadda yadda.”

When someone finds a topic repetitive or uninteresting:
A: “He keeps talking about his new car, how fast it is, the different features it has, and yadda yadda.”

Synonyms:
et cetera, blah blah, etc
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