TenderLovingKiller®
Well-Known Member
my bad. I was thinks it f Italian Pane.pain = french word for bread. thought that one might be a little obscure, but I like my deep cut jokes.
my bad. I was thinks it f Italian Pane.pain = french word for bread. thought that one might be a little obscure, but I like my deep cut jokes.
Not for nothing ( @Mather ) both conjugations are correct.FIFTY
Challah at @Mather for setting up all these great puns?I have trying to make a challah pun for the last several hours with no luck
We can have a companion tee for N&G spouses that says “That’s what they think.”We should put this on tee shirts!
The dictionary says both are good. It’s not plural anyhow."Proofs" is the plural when referring to the bread process. "Proves" is the plural when referring to the truth or existence of something. Only one works in the context of bread puns.
His eyes are crusty if he thinks verbs are plural. Maybe he’s just good and baked.Crust @Mather on this, he's some sort of spelling guru.
Neither are PLURAL. It is the present transitive tense.Proves is only plural if you're trying to claim it's referring to bread, which it isn't, because it isn't spelled that way, it's spelled proofs. IT'S A FAULTY BREAD PUN NEWMAN, AND I WON'T STAND FOR IT
Feel free to challah back at us when you think of one.I have trying to make a challah pun for the last several hours with no luck
Uh huh and what's "proves"? Several proving processes?Neither are PLURAL. It is the present transitive tense.
And technically (speaking as the trained chef in the room)…
Proofing is the process of ensuring your yeast is activated. Typically this is done before you have made a dough.
Proving is the process of allowing your dough to rise.
Well, as someone who’s seen several episodes of The Great British Baking Show and who googled to double check before initially replying, I say it’s Proofs.And technically (speaking as the trained chef in the room)…
Boom! This argument is toast!No one actually proofs
siri burn thread to the ground please