@Transition @mollydotcom Oh, I sit corrected then. It did come to me by way of a fellow student from China. Perhaps I misunderstood?
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@HappyDae @mollydotcom A CHINESE person told you that? Commonly used in English speeches/presentations to ‘get people excited’, but false.
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@HappyDae @mollydotcom Ah! I see. Must have been a misunderstanding. Not to be ‘that guy’, but that stuff spreads through repetition.
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@Transition @mollydotcom I mean REALLY. Who looks for proof in a pudding??
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@HappyDae @mollydotcom LOL! I’ve NO IDEA on the origin of that! Never made sense to me either. R U looking for proof someone MADE pudding?
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@Transition @mollydotcom Original is "The proof of the pudding is in the tasting." Now THAT makes sense, no?
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@HappyDae @mollydotcom THAT makes sense! I guess it ‘drifted’ over time. I may write a blog post about the “Crisis/Opportunity” thing.
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@Transition @mollydotcom Please send me the link, that I may read it, OK?
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@Transition @HappyDae So the saying, "May you live in interesting times" - is that accurate, and is it seen as a blessing or a curse if so?
Aug 17, 2012 · 12:24 AM UTC
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