[meme] Ten Things I've Done That Others Probably Haven't
Saturday, 26 February 2005 11:09I found it hard to come up with anything. Still, here's my attempt.
Had 8th grade maths lessons while in 6th grade, and 4th grade English lessons while in 3rd grade.Worked with an RFC-1086-style X.25-TCP bridge (well, a simulator, since requirements changed before the program went into testing), and gave a talk about this at YAPC::Europe.- Shaken the hand of a prophet, and held open the door for a pope.
- Ordered the bouquet for our wedding two hours before the wedding… and bought the rings after the wedding.
- Received a "Dear John" letter during a two-week mini-mission.
- Passed level two of the Klingon Language Certification Program on the same day as, and with a better score than on, level one, and found an error in that test. (My Klingon has rusted quite a bit since then, though.)
- Translated into someone else's conlang during a Conlang Translation Relay.
- Got a 20-minute crash course in differentiating polynomials in preparation for taking part at an international mathematics competition where most of the participants were one year ahead of me.
- Was woken up in the middle of the night to fill out border papers, since I had forgotten to bring my passport along with me (on a train where passports were collected when you boarded so that the attendant could do the formalities for you when the train crossed the border without the travellers' having to wake up for it).
- Sung a hymn in Estonian (or gave it my best attempt, at any rate).
Been told that I had an English accent when speaking German but a German accent when speaking English.Been to Liechtenstein, and have a stamp in my (now expired) passport to prove it.
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Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 10:18 (UTC)no subject
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 11:02 (UTC)How about: "10. Been to Liechtenstein and got a stamp in my (old) passport to prove it."
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Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 11:09 (UTC)no subject
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 11:14 (UTC)I don't think there are many people with both O-levels and GCSEs. The latter replaced the former; the year I got my O-level was the last year they were offered. (I think. There might have been some overlap.)
O-levels and GCSEs
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 12:47 (UTC)*raises hand*
I took my maths O-levels in 9th grade, and O-levels in several other subjects in 10th grade, but for history, I took the IGCSE (international GCSE, I think) in tenth grade. Classes before me took only O-levels in 10th and classes after me only IGCSEs; ours was the only one with overlap.
I'm not sure whether they overlapped at any given institution, though, since I think that year was also the one when my school was switching over from one to the other (I think it used to have O-levels administered from a London university, and they moved to IGCSEs from Cambrige, or the other way around).
At any rate, I found that a felicitous choice since my history grades were not that good, but since it was a different kind of exam, my grade for that subject isn't on the O-level diploma I received for the other four or five subjects I took that year :)
no subject
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 13:24 (UTC)After elementary school, all subjects except English are separated by ability level. So for example I did have Pre-Algebra in 7th grade when some people don't get to it until 10th, but that's hardly unusual.
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Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 17:46 (UTC)no subject
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 18:48 (UTC)Liechenstein
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 19:14 (UTC)Not to see any specific sights... just because I thought it would be nifty to have been in such a small country.
Re: Liechenstein
Date: Saturday, 26 February 2005 23:19 (UTC)Re: Liechenstein
Date: Sunday, 27 February 2005 00:34 (UTC)Chris
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Date: Sunday, 27 February 2005 02:39 (UTC)What was the occasion of the Estonian hymn?
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Date: Sunday, 27 February 2005 05:51 (UTC)Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, before my mission to Greece and Cyprus.
Occasionally, when we got off a lesson a bit early or when we had time to practise on our own, I'd wander the hallway of our floor. On one such occasion, I came past the classroom teaching Estonian as they were about to close and I joined in with the closing hymn.
There were only a couple of students in that class, and I don't remember whether they asked me in or whether I invited myself, but it was fun: a very enthusiastic rendering of Let us All Press On (http://www.geocities.com/ddstone48/hymn_texts_k_l.htm#f).