It means that if things end up okay, then the whole thing is okay.
So they say...
It was a common proverb before it became the title of a play by Shakespeare.
The Merchant Venice and King Lear All's Well That Ends Well
Well there's " junk "
No, the quote "Liberty, when it begins to take root, is a plant of rapid growth" is not a proverb. It is a phrase attributed to George Washington describing the quick expansion of freedom when it is established.
If you mean by adding more details then I strongly suggest you lease well alone, you may alter the whole meaning of the proverb. My suggestion is to fully understand what the writer is saying. There may be symbolic meanings in the work that need to be understood. Certain phrasings may need to be comprehended, for what was meant when the proverb was written may not mean the same thing today. Who is the proverb talking to and does it apply to you.
Well, mom is one, madam is another and then there is medium and moratorium. There are too many to list.
well the game ends and the guild master begins to talk about how your hero threw Albion into chaos. after that, not much then the game ends.
It's not a proverb, but a quotation from a play by Shakespeare called "All's Well That Ends Well". In this play the heroine Helena is having a tough time but she says, "All's well that ends well; still the fine's the crown; whate'er the course, the end is the renown." which may be freely paraphrased as "It's ok as long as it ends well; the finish is still the crowning moment; it doesn't matter how you get there, because it is the end that matters."
It is mainly determined by the pressure and composition of the atmosphere as well as how far away from the earth it is.
Central America is not a continent neither is North America, the Americans took the name in a wrong way they are not the only Americans since we were born in this continent, that begins or ends in Canada, and begins or ends in the Patagonia, so Central America is a region as well as north America.
It means that if things end up okay, then the whole thing is okay.