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minority. Discussion should be by consensus not by majority vote, but you certainly do not have consensus at the moment, even if you have pushed your changes through in a considerable number of articles on what we might for want of a neutral word call "public schools". The term "private school" does not accurately cover the case, as there are numerous other types of school that could be called private; the agreed term for many years has now been "independent school" to avoid that difficulty. Your "clear, unambiguous and unequivocal" statement does not take into account the many kinds of school in the UK: for example, it equates nonstate with non-governmental, but Church of
England and Academy schools are certainly state schools but equally certainly non-governmental, so as a definition it's a total mess. A clear, unambiguous and unequivocal mess, perhaps.
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mandatory taxation through public (government) funding; at some private schools students may be able to get a scholarship, which makes the cost cheaper, depending on a talent the student may have (e.g. sport scholarship, art scholarship, academic scholarship), financial need, or tax credit scholarships that might be available.
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of intestinal transplant. He is however approx 29 at this point and it would be dubious whether this distinction could be claimed for him. Perhaps it is talking about another Omer
Moghraby. (the other I am referring to I googled and seems to be quite a successful doctor in London at the moment however).. KidOblivious
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I'm not repeating this 'all over the place' I'm placing it on the Talk Pages of those articles I'm trying to amend to seek clarity on private schools. Please don't try to claim that because there are so many different types of school, it's difficult to ascertain which ones are public sector and which
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I (T. 70-74) remember "speckle" and "tanner", but not "bug", "boomer", "pig" "schtig" or "stripe". I remember a "copy" being an essay on a set topic, not a prize; and surely "shag" (meaning "not-school" in a rather abstract way, e.g. "shag clothing" = not uniform, "shagging off" = illicitly skipping
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Straight from the horse's mouth, some of those terms (such as Stodge, Sixth, Boomer, Tosh, Copy, Distinction, Levee (I think one of the es is supposed to have an accent too)) are used and some (such as Beak, Tanner, Speckle, Bug, Topos) I have never heard in my life. They may be historical and not in
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This section has to be on of the worst I've ever read on
Knowledge (XXG). It cannot be verified so is open to abuse. Anyone could write anything. Also some of this isn't Rugby School slang, its public school slang. Beak is a commonly known (if somewhat oldfashioned) term and prep is used everywhere.
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And perhaps whether the 'pioneer of the intesinal transplant' Omer
Moghraby is actually the pioneer of the intestinal transplant, as he did not actually finish his time at Rugby, and was also my peer while I attended (1990-1995) however I can't find any actual references on the internet to a pioneer
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Private schools, also known as independent schools, non-governmental, or nonstate schools, are not administered by local, state or national governments; thus, they retain the right to select their students and are funded in whole or in part by charging their students tuition, rather than relying on
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Over the last ten years most UK public sector secondary schools have converted to academies and are therefore independent. They're independent of central government and Local
Education Authority control. This development has made it all the more confusing to describe private schools as independent.
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which is quite different really. I suppose you will argue that
Knowledge (XXG) is not a dictionary of jargon either, but I find it a shame to remove documented historical jargon (many of these terms are no longer used at Rugby) from the article. These terms should be preserved. Where do you suggest
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keeps reversing my edit so that the article starts with "Rugby School is a day and boarding public school (private and co-educational)" It's got 'private' and 'public' but doesn't have 'independent' even though it's been claimed that this is how these schools should be described and even though I
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Well, it's fascinating to think that public school slang has a limited life, and is dynamic, just like slang in the 'real world'. I can vouch for most of the words in the current list as being in use when I was at Rugby (Sh, 1961-66), albeit with some exceptions: Boomer, Pig (for Levée), Speckle,
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The few words I have added to the list are absolutely authentic as of the 1960's. 'Bug' for library was used for both the libraries in the houses, and the big school ones - the 'Temple Bug.' 'Topos' is of course from Greek τόπος, meaning 'a place', and was the only acceptable word for a lavatory
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Ah, I see, you're repeating this all over the place. That doesn't make you right; and I see also that you are being reverted and then reverting edits on this matter by numerous other editors. While this doesn't necessarily make you wrong, it at least indicates that you might possibly be in a
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preserving them? If they are included in
Wiktionary (and they probably should), they will be dispersed; whereas anyone wanting to research Rugby School jargon (and that is not written tongue in cheek - there are many collections/dictionaries of jargon/slang by eminent researchers such as
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As a current teacher at Rugby School, I'm sad to say that the 'tick' is no more, and none of my colleagues know about it. Quite a few of the other words in this section are also no longer used. I'm very surprised to see nothing about the LXX and XX (and the history behind these).
656:(whatever is it today? and why should it ever have changed?). Beak of course (I'm surprised the editor above never heard of this) is universal in schools - I believe it was originally used only for a magistrate and then spread to the schoolmaster usage (or the other way round?).
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listed as ‘Independent’, one has it as ‘Private’ and only one has it as ‘Public’. Can I propose that, for the sake of consistency, they all have ‘Public School’ in the infobox. They are defined as such by the 1868 Public
Schools Act. Is there a consensus on this?
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I note that the article on Eton includes an estimate of the annual fees. The Rugby website, of course, has nothing to say about this. Would some current student or staff member (several of whom I see have posted here) care to provide a similar figure for Rugby?
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A link to a subpage is probably the best option here if it absolutely must be kept, but the guideline is pretty clear. Perhaps if it was a link out of the history section instead of a section in-and-of itself it wouldn't attract so much attention.
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A HISTORY OF RUGBY SCHOOL BY W. H. D. ROUSE, M.A. SOMETIME FELLOW OF CHRIST'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE LONDON DUCKWORTH & CO. 3, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN, W.C. 1898 Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & Co. At the
Ballantyne Press
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I don't know who put a citation request template on that section, but I hardly see how anyone is going to be able to cite references or sources for the words there. They must all be straight from the horses' mouths - what more does anyone
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for posting the Rugby headmastership, long needed! I couldn't find the info anywhere. BTW, what happened between Walter
Hamilton and Brian Rees? And have you any idea where could be found the headmastership pre-Arnold?
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I wanted to include a list of Rugby's headmasters - and cannot find one for hours of googling. Other schools have such lists, and if anyone can manage to find one, please post it somewhere in the article.
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Stripe, Tanner. The latter probably arose from our (inexcusably snobbish) way of mockingly pronouncing Town House - 'Tahn arse'. The others I have never heard of and presume they arose after my time.
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with OllyH but I believe that if he wants to bring the term up it should go into the main article and not in the list of what are mostly venerable and historical slang words and expressions.
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ones are fee-paying private sector schools. We all know the difference and the diffence ought to be made clear on here. The purpose of Knowledge (XXG) is to inform, not to confuse. (
103:, a collaborative effort to write quality articles about schools around the world. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the
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Well it just goes to show how ephemeral school slang is. It would be interesting to know which words/expressions in the list have survived and which have become extinct.
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At present there is a discussion relating to the renaming of this category. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at
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Made top based on Google hits. Pity they're are still few references. There should be 20 or 30. Its not too tricky and this school should have a top 100 article.
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I think that the issue of this being a legend or not should be covered in more depth. If this is not possible, then the statement should be removed.
1103:(edit conflict) - Many thanks for replying, I hadn't realized you had already explained the faults in the claim. I was going to state the following:
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I came across this interesting book on Rugby by an assistant Master, published in 1900. Perhaps it can give more information for this Wiki entry.
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It seems somewhat irresponsible to claim this, without ellaborating on the issue. I, for one, would be very interested to know why this is a myth.
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I can see your point Adam. However, we are not talking about slang (although that is the term that has been used - incorrectly). This is actually
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When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
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and as with many other school pages, this fits into the category of a slang dictionary. This section should be removed completely
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209:, where you can join the project and see a list of open tasks. Please also feel free to join in the discussions on the project's
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The answer is to stop making your edits for the reasons we have already covered. If you do it again, I shall seek a topic ban.
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I am a current Rugby pupil and I know that quite a few of these words are no longer used, or at least I haven't heard of them.
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removals seem a little drastic. Conversely the "academic" section added at roughly the same time requires total re-writing.
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to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the
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The infoboxes for the seven historic English public schools are, at present, inconsistent. Five have the
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If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with
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a lesson (also "cutting")) should be included? And isn't "Topos" generic public school slang - c.f.
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I'm going to remove the terms I have heard of because clearly they are not Rugby School slang at all.
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before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template
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https://web.archive.org/web/20150924092635/http://www.rugbyschool.net/New-Head-Master-Announced
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in the opening paragraph the link takes the reader to an article that makes explicitly clear.
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current use, or I may just have, by chance, never heard the terms. Probably the former.
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https://web.archive.org/web/20080610055129/http://www.oft.gov.uk/news/press/2006/182-06
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Quite an interesting article. I only have my reservations regarding this statement:
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Does anyone have a record of the mass revolt that happened at Rugby School in 1797?
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Sir Harry Paget Flashman VC KCB KCIE is a fictional character, not a real person
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deliberately included the word 'independent' as a compromise. (
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in the banner shell. Please resolve this conflict if possible.
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This article has been given a rating which conflicts with the
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for additional information. I made the following changes:
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article and in the opening paragraph it is described as a
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Much British Imperial expansion took place before 1828.
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736:) can have it all at their fingertips in this article.
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This section does not fit Knowledge (XXG) guidelines.
680:. In reinstating it he touchily labels my editing as
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http://www.rugbyschool.net/New-Head-Master-Announced
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famous 80's Sun headline after yet another dope bust
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has taken exception to my removing from the section
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http://www.rugbyschool.net/new-post-for-head-master
688:Rugby School slang: as his entry puts it, it was a
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577:However the legend is pure myth.
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692:. This does not even make it
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1202:Hello fellow Wikipedians,
1035:. If private schools have
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1207:Rugby School
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1165:Garageland66
1160:School Type
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1070:Garageland66
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1047:
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991:
973:184.46.15.59
969:
958:
932:
909:— Preceding
906:
903:
896:
893:
890:
873:24.45.10.127
864:
850:
823:
790:Nick Michael
771:
757:
739:Nick Michael
726:
702:Nick Michael
689:
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677:
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659:Nick Michael
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613:Nick Michael
598:Nick Michael
593:
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337:Architecture
328:Architecture
321:
284:Architecture
256:
218:Warwickshire
210:
206:project page
204:
199:Warwickshire
186:
162:Warwickshire
134:
105:project page
97:
96:
40:WikiProjects
941:93.97.55.83
935:—Preceding
915:213.7.44.27
867:—Preceding
853:Victuallers
833:84.92.51.33
827:—Preceding
643:82.16.77.68
515:Rugby union
506:rugby union
478:Rugby union
1345:Categories
1332:Report bug
670:User:OllyH
606:Thank you
1315:this tool
1308:this tool
1255:dead link
765:JohnKozak
682:vandalism
676:the term
212:talk page
1321:Cheers.—
961:Bigweboy
937:unsigned
911:unsigned
869:unsigned
861:Flashman
829:unsigned
698:edit war
1259:tag to
1211:my edit
1184:Keith D
1154:Infobox
542:on the
453:on the
364:on the
259:on the
165:C‑class
137:on the
110:Schools
59:Schools
30:B-class
1251:Added
729:jargon
678:Drugby
629:want??
595:Thanks
564:": -->
36:scale.
1016:These
998:Cjc13
966:Fees?
809:Cls14
761:If...
694:slang
1188:talk
1169:talk
1139:talk
1116:talk
1092:talk
1088:KJP1
1074:talk
1065:KJP1
1054:talk
1029:BUPA
1002:talk
977:talk
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929:1828
919:talk
877:talk
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813:talk
794:talk
779:talk
617:talk
608:Kwib
566:edit
534:High
1289:RfC
1245:to
1235:to
1225:to
686:not
445:Low
356:Low
251:Low
129:Top
1347::
1302:.
1297:}}
1293:{{
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42::
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