| bio | website | careers.stackoverflow.com/… |
|---|---|---|
| location | Helsinki, Finland | |
| age | 34 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 9 months |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 157 |
I'm a second-language speaker of what I believe is a fairly "neutral" flavour of English (if such a thing exists), mainly influenced by British and American varieties. I tend to prefer British spellings but I'm afraid I sound more American when I talk. :-)
I take an interest in languages, their evolution and history, and all those subtle variations between different dialects and registers. After secondary school I was actually close to going to study English Philology at university, but ended up taking Computer Science instead. Now I am a software developer by profession, and languages remain mainly a hobby for me. (Not only a hobby, as I think good prose writing skills are important in my field. For the last 7 years or so English has been the main written language I've used at work.)
Besides English and my native Finnish, I'm nowadays quite adept at Spanish too (it's my favourite language in a way, especially if spoken with a Cuban accent and when drunk). My Swedish and German are rusty, but re-learnable if need arises.
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May 8 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Apr 19 |
awarded | Good Question |
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Mar 10 |
awarded | Enlightened |
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Mar 10 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Jan 8 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Nov 28 |
awarded | Pundit |
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Sep 10 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
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Aug 6 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Jun 23 |
accepted | Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? |
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Jun 12 |
comment |
Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? Thanks, "cruft" is useful. In this particular case, however, it wasn't really code — just a single JSP file that was essentially empty (but whose existence still caused a bug) — so, a countable noun would be preferred. "Relic", suggested by others, is close to what I was looking for. |
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Jun 12 |
comment |
Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? @RoaringFish: Yeah, "relic" is good. What lead me to think of "remnant" was the Finnish word jäänne, which actually better translates to "relic" or "remains" now that I looked it up. |
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Jun 12 |
revised |
Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? edited tags |
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Jun 12 |
comment |
Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? Thanks! (I sdded some context as a comment to the question.) |
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Jun 12 |
comment |
Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? Context whence the question arose: in a software project, a file that had been laying in version control for a year, originally added with some intention in mind, but actually serving no purpose whatsoever. What to call that file? |
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Jun 12 |
asked | Is saying “an obsolete remnant” redundant? |
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Jun 10 |
comment |
Is “might could” a correct construct? @tchrist: Yes, that sounds about right, but I don't how see how it relates to my comment. Maybe you misread what I wrote. (I never used the phrase you object to.) |
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Jun 8 |
awarded | Constituent |
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Jun 8 |
awarded | Caucus |
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May 7 |
comment |
Does this device to restrict access to roads have a generic name? Another, related name for them seems to be retractable traffic bollard. |
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Jan 10 |
awarded | Announcer |