| bio | website | none |
|---|---|---|
| location | United States | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 2 years, 1 month |
| seen | May 1 at 18:08 | |
| stats | profile views | 75 |
You: Do you know Jon Skeet?
Expert: I once tried to convince the community, it worked remarkably well.
You: Do you know Joel Spolsky?
Expert: I know joel spolsky to a certain degree at least.
You: Does he treat you well?
Expert: :)
You: What is it like to work at Stack Exchange?
Expert: The answer is pretty complicated.
You: I'm listening.
Expert: I used to know someone who was listening.
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Apr 11 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Mar 18 |
awarded | Informed |
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Mar 8 |
answered | Is a whole cake still a “piece” |
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Mar 8 |
awarded | Custodian |
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Mar 8 |
reviewed | Edit Word for person prying on my personal stuffs |
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Mar 8 |
revised |
Word for person prying on my personal stuffs added 12 characters in body |
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Mar 8 |
reviewed | No Action Needed “so long as” vs. “as long as” |
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Mar 8 |
awarded | Custodian |
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Mar 8 |
reviewed | No Action Needed A word meaning the opposite action of recruiting |
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Feb 12 |
awarded | Enlightened |
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Feb 12 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Feb 11 |
answered | Equivalent of sarcastic song “non ti preoccupare, l'importante è partecipare” among Italian football supporters |
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Feb 11 |
answered | In English, is there an established prefix for “mostly”? |
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Jan 26 |
comment |
Is there a word for numbers between 10 and 99? @Lynn Depends on context. I'm sure you've heard six figure salary or that a jury awarded damages reaching well into nine figures. But yeah, agree that we'd never talk about a two figure number here in the US. |
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Jan 14 |
answered | Looking for a formal equivalent phrase for the adverb “personally” |
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Dec 1 |
comment |
Reflexive love: where does “love me some …” come from? @FumbleFingers I don't think this is a dupe of the linked question at all. This Q relates to a particular construction whereas the linked Q is about something else entirely. They do both deal with personal pronouns, but they're not the same question. |
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Dec 1 |
comment |
Reflexive love: where does “love me some …” come from? Great answer -- thanks so much! |
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Dec 1 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Dec 1 |
accepted | Reflexive love: where does “love me some …” come from? |
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Nov 30 |
comment |
Reflexive love: where does “love me some …” come from? Seems to make more sense with get; nobody would question I'm going to get myself some dinner, and it's easy to see me being substituted for myself. |