Lazy Millenial garbage.Nick_BlueNRG wrote: ↑Thu 12 Dec 2019 5:59pmThe idiom is usually stated the proof is in the pudding and means that the end result is the mark of the success or failure of one's efforts or planning. The phrase may also be used in the past and future tenses: the proof will be/was in the pudding.Life Long Saint wrote: ↑Thu 12 Dec 2019 3:59pmNope. The proof of the pudding will be in the eating.Nick_BlueNRG wrote: ↑Thu 12 Dec 2019 3:45pm We can argue this until the cows come home. The fact is, "The proof will be in the pudding".
I'm not sure what a pudding on its own proves!
Click on below link.......
https://www.google.com.au/search?source ... P8qoYsJID0
The concept is that you don't know how good the pudding is until you eat it. The pudding can look cooked from the outside but completely underdone inside...And it might cooked well but taste awful.