I do the "eh" thing sometimes without thinking about it but I agree with you, I don't like being on the other end of it either. I'm trying to work on that
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Fucking “pre-prepare”. Prepare already means to get ready ahead of time.
SME (pronounced smee)
My company is flooded with SMEs who aren’t even good, let alone experts at anything
"Hence why"
Syntactically makes no sense. Just say "that's why," that's what you are trying to say.
Never mind I found it
...took the effort to nvm-d the post, but did not share how, where, or what etc
"The proof is in the pudding." It makes zero sense! The actual adage is, "The proof of the pudding is in the eating." It means that a dessert can look perfect and enticing, but if the cook used salt instead of sugar it will taste disgusting.
I don't know what people even think they're saying with "the proof is in the pudding".
when i was a kid, i figured it was a reference to some now obscure detective story, where a bowl of pudding contained the important clue as to who the killer was or something. it wasn't until much later that i heard of this etymology.
This is now top of my list