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DirtyGame Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Do they have the same meaning?

"That's said" and "being said"?
and is "said" alone one of them also? If there's more of them please tell me.
  

Top answer

I think the phrase you are looking for is ' That being said'. The broad idea is this. A fact is stated, which suggests some course of action.

  • I think the phrase you are looking for is ' That being said'.
  • The broad idea is this.
  • A fact is stated, which suggests some course of action.
  • But despite that, some other action will be taken.
  • eg Mary does not love me.
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4 Answers
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I think the phrase you are looking for is 'That being said'.

The broad idea is this.
A fact is stated, which suggests some course of action. But despite that, some other action will be taken.
eg Mary does not love me. That being said, s
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I think you have them both a little wrong. These are what I expect, and they are synonymous:

I don't like guns. That said, I still want to join the army.
I don't like guns. That being said, I still want to join the army.
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So "that" is necessary to use, right guys?

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