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you name it

Idioms  
  1. Everything one can think of, as in We've got a crib, highchair, diapers—you name it. [Colloquial; mid-1900s]


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

But when you listen to people who go through this at the local level, when you listen to our colleagues in Sinaloa, in Tamaulipas, in Michoacán, in Guanajuato, even in Jalisco, and you see the fear on their faces, and then you talk to the people of Culiacán, and see how ingrained this is, how powerful these people are, how deep their tentacles go into politics, business, you name it, then the gravity of the situation really, really hits you.

From Slate

“My brothers, Zeke and Jeremiah, took over the farming, which left me to care for everything else. That meant putting supper in the pot each day. Rabbit, squirrel, possum, muskrat. You name it. I got to be a pretty good shot.”

From Literature

You name it, he's done it all.

From BBC

With few entertainment options available, consumers, flush with cash from stimulus checks, were quick to spend the dough on stuff they didn’t really need—sneakers, designer handbags, flat-screen TVs, you name it.

From Barron's

You can go crazy with string lights to create an enchanted tree in your backyard or adorn it with some creepy critters — snakes, bats, spiders…you name it — to amp up the scare factor.

From Salon