What Does “Break the News” Mean?
“Break the News” is a common English idiom. It means to tell someone about something important, often bad. For example: I had to break the news that the trip was cancelled. In this one-minute lesson you hear the idiom used in a short, natural conversation and shadow it out loud — so you understand it, remember it, and can say it with the right rhythm and stress.
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Understanding “Break the News”
Meaning: “Break the News” means to tell someone about something important, often bad.
Example in use: I had to break the news that the trip was cancelled.
Idioms like this are common in casual everyday English, TV, and movies — shadowing them helps you sound natural.
Say the idiom as one smooth phrase with its natural stress, not word by word with equal emphasis.
Learning goals
- Understand what “Break the News” means.
- Use “Break the News” correctly in a sentence.
- Say the idiom with natural stress and rhythm.
- Recognize the idiom instantly when you hear it in conversation or film.
About this practice
“English in a Minute” explains one common idiom — “Break the News” — in about a minute using a short, natural conversation.
At B1 level it is a quick, focused idiom you can learn and shadow in a single sitting.
Practice tips
- 1Shadow the idiom as one chunk, not word by word.
- 2Use “Break the News” in your own sentence today to lock it in.
- 3Repeat the short clip a few times until the idiom feels automatic.
Frequently asked questions
What does “Break the News” mean?
“Break the News” means to tell someone about something important, often bad. For example: I had to break the news that the trip was cancelled.
Is “Break the News” formal or informal?
It's an informal, conversational idiom — common in everyday speech, TV, and film rather than formal writing.
How does shadowing help with idioms?
Idioms have a fixed rhythm. Shadowing trains you to say the whole phrase smoothly and to recognize it instantly when you hear it.
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