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  1. Dictionary
    kidding
    /ˈkɪdɪŋ/

    noun

    • 1. playfulness or teasing: "they could be insufferable when the kidding began"

    adjective

    • 1. playfully or teasingly deceptive: "he chided her in a kidding way"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. You know, there's a real fine line between kidding and trying to make light of the truth. From the Cambridge English Corpus Also, the season of kidding provided an indirect adjustment of age within first lactation since month and age at kidding were confounded due to seasonal reproduction.

  3. noun. ˈkid. Synonyms of kid. 1. : a young person. kids in high school. especially : child. a married couple with two kids. often used as a generalized reference to one especially younger or less experienced.

  4. Kidding aside, losing hair is pretty traumatic and it's often an outward, unmistakable sign that someone has cancer. From Plain Dealer This guy might be kidding , but he definitely knows what he's talking about.

  5. Synonyms for KIDDING: joking, sarcastic, fooling, jesting, joshing, quizzical, razzing, bantering, mocking, rallying.

  6. no kidding; sb has got to be kidding/sb must be kidding; who is sb kidding/who is sb trying to kid?

  7. “When they introduced me as vice president [of Zambia], he thought they were kidding,” Scott said. From The Daily Beast To which I can only respond, “ARE YOU FREAKING KIDDING ME?!”

  8. Today’s lesson is going to focus on a few different phrases all using the word ‘kidding,’ like ‘I’m just kidding,’ or, ‘no kidding,’ or, ‘are you kidding me?’ You’re going to learn how to use each of these in conversational English today.