| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Norfolk, VA | |
| age | 36 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 9 months |
| seen | Nov 29 '12 at 15:16 | |
| stats | profile views | 194 |
"I have a master's degree, I interned on Capitol Hill, I helped my professor write an encyclopedia, I speak two languages, I had a 3.7 GPA and I can't find more than a part-time job," she said."
Hurrah for graduating in 2009!
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Jul 25 |
comment |
Is the SE “new privilege” notification message a sentence? I just received a privilege notification and copied it directly into the question. The dash that is in the question body now should be accurate. |
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Jul 25 |
revised |
Is the SE “new privilege” notification message a sentence? copied an actual new priv message in to ensure that the dash is authentic |
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Jul 25 |
asked | Is the SE “new privilege” notification message a sentence? |
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Jul 3 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Jun 26 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Jun 8 |
awarded | Caucus |
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May 9 |
awarded | Great Question |
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Apr 13 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Mar 26 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Mar 6 |
awarded | Taxonomist |
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Jan 19 |
awarded | Favorite Question |
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Jan 5 |
comment |
When a dagger is used to indicate a note, must it come after an asterisk? @Kris, although I had heard of the Chicago guide before, I didn't know that it was considered authoritative (and I certainly didn't have a subscription to it). The resources I did check didn't address this issue at all, although I could have looked harder. |
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Jan 5 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Jan 5 |
accepted | When a dagger is used to indicate a note, must it come after an asterisk? |
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Jan 4 |
asked | When a dagger is used to indicate a note, must it come after an asterisk? |
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Dec 15 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Oct 30 |
revised |
“Welcome to Q&A for …” or “Welcome to a Q&A site for …”? Markdown doesn't work in titles |
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Oct 30 |
suggested | suggested edit on “Welcome to Q&A for …” or “Welcome to a Q&A site for …”? |
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Oct 28 |
comment |
What is the term for police officers in command positions? That argument is a non sequitur. You are of course completely right that police departments and armed forces didn't evolve in the same way, but that's immaterial. A term with analagous meaning and different etymology could have evolved over time, or someone could have even created one out of the blue after seeing the need for one. |
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Oct 27 |
comment |
What is the term for police officers in command positions? I'm not looking for the name of a particular rank, though. I'm looking for a single word or term that refers collectively to all the ranks listed in that Wikipedia entry except for detectives/corporals/deputies/patrolmen. |