| bio | website | karol.piczak.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Warsaw, Poland | |
| age | 26 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | Oct 6 '11 at 11:57 | |
| stats | profile views | 9 |
One-liner: Mashup of Finance, IT/CS/AI/ML and other buzz words. Garnish with music composition and some sound design.
Educational background: Master of Finance, now pursuing a PhD in Computer Science (audio data analysis in recommender systems).
My online ID: karol.dvl.pl
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Dec 11 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Jun 5 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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May 24 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Aug 31 |
awarded | Fanatic |
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Jun 22 |
awarded | Enthusiast |
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May 30 |
awarded | Scholar |
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May 30 |
accepted | When to use Perfekt and Präteritum? |
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May 28 |
awarded | Suffrage |
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May 28 |
awarded | Vox Populi |
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May 25 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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May 25 |
awarded | Quorum |
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May 25 |
comment |
When to use Perfekt and Präteritum? The example was purposely exaggerated to comment on the spoken/written rule, but it is like @musiKk said - at times it's only a gut feeling of something sounding right or not. I would probably find it hard to explain to someone else though, which I assume would mean that deep down I don't really know the difference that well. |
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May 25 |
awarded | Student |
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May 25 |
asked | When to use Perfekt and Präteritum? |
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May 24 |
comment |
Is there a good on-line resource to look up the etymology of German words? @thei, you're question (german.stackexchange.com/q/2/34) is more about German-English dictionaries, at least the way I get it. Here it's rather about monolingual specialized dictionaries. |
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May 24 |
awarded | Teacher |
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May 24 |
answered | Is there a good on-line resource to look up the etymology of German words? |
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May 24 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
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May 24 |
awarded | Supporter |