{ "_name_or_path": "distilbert-base-uncased", "activation": "gelu", "architectures": [ "DistilBertForSequenceClassification" ], "attention_dropout": 0.1, "dim": 768, "dropout": 0.1, "hidden_dim": 3072, "id2label": { "0": "Germany has temperatures ranging from ~-15\u00b0C to ~34\u00b0C (5\u00b0F-93\u00b0F). Both of these are extremes that occur only during a few weeks in the year. Usually having a warm jacket during the winter, and a wind jacket or raincoat during the rest of the year should be fine. In the summer and spring, bring both long and short clothing, in autumn and winter, bring long clothing. What you should not bring are baseball caps. They look just weird and nobody really wears them. There is snow in the winter, and a lot of rain through the year.", "1": "First of all, keep German customs regulations in mind - notably, bringing meat and fish products into the EU can be problematic, and you can only bring limited quantities of alcohol in duty-free. Common suggestions for good gifts include:\nProducts from your town or area (e.g. local crafts, guidebook, or cookbook). Depending on your host family's tastes, sport apparel (e.g. a jersey from a local sports team) may also be a good gift.\nAmerican chocolate uses different ingredients and is not to most Europeans' taste.\nAlcohol is another common suggestion, but it strongly depends on your hosts' tastes (do they drink alcohol? A local wine or a local craft beer? Or a national liquor?); therefore, be considerate, and if you're unsure, wine is a good default option. If your hosts have kids, make sure they are above the age of 18 before giving them alcohol.\nCertain higher-end brands (e.g. clothes, makeup, bags) are much cheaper in the US than in Europe, but particularly when buying clothes, keep in mind that American clothes are often cut more loosely than European clothes, and so may not be to everyone's tastes.\n\nSnacks are always a popular gift item; here are some of the more common suggestions for American snacks that are difficult to find in Germany:\nRoot beer flavored candies\nCandy corn\nRare Oreo flavors\nChex Mix\nKool-Aid mix\nNutty bars, pecan rolls and honey buns\nTwinkies\nRanch flavored things", "2": "While hitchhiking isn't that common any more, it should still be possible to do it. Hitchhike from Autobahnrastplatz (motorway station) to Autobahnrastplatz, and you should be fine.If you're looking for a very cheap way to travel, see below for what's the cheapest way to travel?, Start at Rome2Rio. Here you put in where you start and where you want to end up. This will give you general options (flying, train, bus, driving both by rideshare and alone). This doesn't work for you, or you want to see specific options for just one of these? The official train website is bahn.de and you can change the language into one you prefer. You can also download their app on your mobile phone to check routes, times, buy and store tickets on the go. There's a limited contingent of reduced-price tickets for early booking, so if you can, book 6-8 weeks in advance. For more information, see the wiki page on train travel. The Fernbus (long-distance coach) is a good alternative to the train for budget-conscious travellers - it's usually cheaper and the coaches are comfortable, but will be slower than the train. One of the largest ridesharing companies is blablacar, and there is also the Mitfahrzentrale. Share a ride with people passing through where you are and where you're going.There are internal German flights, but they tend to only make sense when you're travelling from the northern to the southern end of Germany. You can check connections and times on a consolidator like Google Flights.You may also want to look at our page on general travel advice." }, "initializer_range": 0.02, "label2id": { "First of all, keep German customs regulations in mind - notably, bringing meat and fish products into the EU can be problematic, and you can only bring limited quantities of alcohol in duty-free. Common suggestions for good gifts include:\nProducts from your town or area (e.g. local crafts, guidebook, or cookbook). Depending on your host family's tastes, sport apparel (e.g. a jersey from a local sports team) may also be a good gift.\nAmerican chocolate uses different ingredients and is not to most Europeans' taste.\nAlcohol is another common suggestion, but it strongly depends on your hosts' tastes (do they drink alcohol? A local wine or a local craft beer? Or a national liquor?); therefore, be considerate, and if you're unsure, wine is a good default option. If your hosts have kids, make sure they are above the age of 18 before giving them alcohol.\nCertain higher-end brands (e.g. clothes, makeup, bags) are much cheaper in the US than in Europe, but particularly when buying clothes, keep in mind that American clothes are often cut more loosely than European clothes, and so may not be to everyone's tastes.\n\nSnacks are always a popular gift item; here are some of the more common suggestions for American snacks that are difficult to find in Germany:\nRoot beer flavored candies\nCandy corn\nRare Oreo flavors\nChex Mix\nKool-Aid mix\nNutty bars, pecan rolls and honey buns\nTwinkies\nRanch flavored things": 1, "Germany has temperatures ranging from ~-15\u00b0C to ~34\u00b0C (5\u00b0F-93\u00b0F). Both of these are extremes that occur only during a few weeks in the year. Usually having a warm jacket during the winter, and a wind jacket or raincoat during the rest of the year should be fine. In the summer and spring, bring both long and short clothing, in autumn and winter, bring long clothing. What you should not bring are baseball caps. They look just weird and nobody really wears them. There is snow in the winter, and a lot of rain through the year.": 0, "While hitchhiking isn't that common any more, it should still be possible to do it. Hitchhike from Autobahnrastplatz (motorway station) to Autobahnrastplatz, and you should be fine.If you're looking for a very cheap way to travel, see below for what's the cheapest way to travel?, Start at Rome2Rio. Here you put in where you start and where you want to end up. This will give you general options (flying, train, bus, driving both by rideshare and alone). This doesn't work for you, or you want to see specific options for just one of these? The official train website is bahn.de and you can change the language into one you prefer. You can also download their app on your mobile phone to check routes, times, buy and store tickets on the go. There's a limited contingent of reduced-price tickets for early booking, so if you can, book 6-8 weeks in advance. For more information, see the wiki page on train travel. The Fernbus (long-distance coach) is a good alternative to the train for budget-conscious travellers - it's usually cheaper and the coaches are comfortable, but will be slower than the train. One of the largest ridesharing companies is blablacar, and there is also the Mitfahrzentrale. Share a ride with people passing through where you are and where you're going.There are internal German flights, but they tend to only make sense when you're travelling from the northern to the southern end of Germany. You can check connections and times on a consolidator like Google Flights.You may also want to look at our page on general travel advice.": 2 }, "max_position_embeddings": 512, "model_type": "distilbert", "n_heads": 12, "n_layers": 6, "pad_token_id": 0, "qa_dropout": 0.1, "seq_classif_dropout": 0.2, "sinusoidal_pos_embds": false, "tie_weights_": true, "transformers_version": "4.37.1", "vocab_size": 30522 }