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  1. Sep 18, 2015 · Are You Joking?: Directed by Jake Wilson. With Josh Segarra, Ashley Park, Vanessa Ray, Katherine Waterston. Twenty-something New Yorker Barb Schwartz somehow ended up in a life that kinda... sucks. When she is reunited with her childhood BFF, ballet dancer Billy, she is inspired to turn her life around by revisiting her first love: comedy.

  2. 'You're joking me' is certainly an idiom in Irish English, as in this newspaper headline: Players react with 'You're joking me' when game abandoned. Click to expand... “You‘re joking me” is familiar in London too.

  3. YOU'RE JOKING! definition: 1. something you say to show that you are surprised by what someone has said, or do not believe it…. Learn more.

  4. Nov 28, 2012 · For me, "Are you joking?" and "Are you kidding?" are most often hypothetical, a reaction of disbelief. "Are you teasing me?" I've never heard used hypothetically in that sense, but maybe that's regional. "Are you joking me?" sounds incorrect, never heard it at all.

  5. Sep 23, 2022 · "I'm joking" (or "I'm only joking") is extremely common and probably the most idiomatic way to express this. There are probably countless ways to say the same thing, most suggestions would be slang and these may be particular to dialects of English (British English, American English etc) or even more remotely to regional dialects.

  6. Well actually “joking” and “kidding” are almost exactly the same thing. The only mild and minor difference is that (usually) someone who is ‘joking’ is telling a funny story, being clever, etc. While someone who is ‘kidding’ is directing their cleverness and funny words toward some particular person.

  7. Sep 26, 2021 · What it means is most likely not what you're trying to say. Your sentence looks like it's meant to express surprise, disbelief, and irritation. "Are you joking with me" doesn't work. “You are losing the wallet and keys”.