This is the nearly complete list of Userboxes that I've found that apply to me. There are many more here than I've chosen to put on my main Userpage, simply because there are so many Userboxes that apply.
Where applicable and/or necessary, I've included a little extra information explaining why and/or how a particular Userbox applies.
On the ancestry thing, I've inluded both ends of the scale, because they both apply to me. Because I've got roots all over Europe (hence the "multi"), I don't consider myself hyphenated (hence the "none").
I read a lot of nonfiction books; a lot of them seem to be about the Middle Ages (hence that particular userbox). And I like the movie Monty Python and the Holy Grail. I might be able to go see Spamalot now that it's been open a while. Oh, and I also knit and quilt. My major news source is NPR, and I'm a Mets fan.
In theory, I'm a student at Brooklyn College, a part of the City University of New York — not to be confused with the State University of New York. (For the record, the acronyms CUNY and SUNY are pronounced "CUE-knee" and "SUE-knee.") But in reality, I have a day job, and I'm past the stage of education where there are a whole lot of sections of everything. Oh, and I have a rough draft of a Brooklyn College Userbox at User:AnnaKucsma/Sandbox/Userboxes In Progress.
These explain my profficiency in various languages. I'm a native speaker of English, specifially the American variety. I know some French, but nothing impressive.
I freely admit to being a stickler, albeit a minor one. See Lynne Truss's Eats, Shoots and Leaves for a definition and description. The book does provide a refresher course, complete with examples of just what can go wrong when you don't pay attention to where all those dots go.
The passive voice isn't really a stickler thing for me, but in theory it should be avoided (or, in theory one should avoid the passive voice). I tend to think it is sometimes neccesary, as it sometimes makes for better prose. The passive voice only gets to me when prose doesn't use anything else. As for "snuck," I think "sneaked" sounds weird, despite being nearer to the regular past tense. (I use "pled" as the past tense of "plea," but even NPR uses "pleaded.")