Knowledge (XXG)

User:Rothorpe

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1808: 1061: 1002: 1498: 1402: 1170: 1131: 1271: 1234: 1205: 84: 1719: 1441: 1366: 1693: 1632: 388:. It's thin and slanted so as to make spaces unnecessary—a space saver, not a space creator, as, for example, between the "Songs"/"On a Record". This ugly, amateurish-looking spacing ( / ) mirrors advertising, TV, website headings, etc., where commas may be felt to be insufficiently eye-catching. The spaced slash in prose is traditionally used only to indicate line breaks when quoting the 958:, I was watching television with the sound turned down, as one did, and, while the commentators giggled uncontrollably, I thought that much more often Holding would be bowling to Willey, fast bowler to all-rounder. It didn't occur to me that history would rewrite it, with Johnston himself reversing them in his autobiography, apparently, and others even claiming the story was apocryphal. 723:, yes, but always for bad deeds: a notorious criminal, yes; a notorious dwarf planet, no. A synonym of notoriety, if somewhat further along the evil scale, is infamy. No one seems to think "infamous" means "not famous", at least not when it's not written down, perhaps because it's pronounced so differently (*fñyməs; *ínfəməs, echoing *ínfəmy—see below for pronunciation key). 392:-prose of poems and songs. Here, people sometimes use spaces in prose cases that involve items of more than one word on either side of the slash, but these can be separated with a comma, conjunction, or ampersand (&). Nor should there be spaces around an em dash (a spaced em dash is used, for example in tests, to indicate that there is a — missing), or unquoted 1466: 438:
distinctly American). Similarly, there is no point in fastidiously standardising the date format throughout an article: it is not a matter of spelling. (But when the year is mentioned I do prefer to put the day first: it's more logical and avoids commas, two of which are needed when there is no other
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This is of course an optional system for learning and I am not suggesting universally putting accents on traditional spellings. The lack of them is one of the few things that learners like about English orthography, but this advantage is perpetually being undermined, witness the now almost universal
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is part of the name". There was a vote, and uncapitalised "the" beat capitalised, but only by 2–1. (Incidentally, thanks to Knowledge (XXG), I now know that the Beatles officially ceased to be Beatles on the day I ceased to be a teenager.) A capital T is necessary when referring to an article, as in
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teachers as the past perfect, is indeed being less used than previously. In informal speech "I'd looked at it" sounds much like "I looked at it", and of course these days tenses are not being taught formally so much in schools. I first became aware of the past perfect at school when learning Latin,
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Do not use BCE for BC. BCE means Before the Common Era, though I forgive myself for always thinking it means Before the Christian Era, just a new-fangled and long-winded way of saying Before Christ—BC, which is agreeably shorter. And the opposite of BC is AD, not CE. AD is often said to stand for
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in running prose (like switching off accidentally) (and on again, ugh!), which would never be acceptable in a print publication (people are used to seeing them in Knowledge (XXG) lists, where they can suggest columns), and replace them, usually with a semicolon (like this; that's better: see
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I have my own idiolectical pronunciations of some astronomical objects, the result of reading astronomy books during my only-childhood in the 1950s, and I thought it might be interesting to list some of them here (compare notes?). Some I have dropped: I blame my usually very literate father
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is a wiki that is not free to edit—you have to apply. Thus vandal-less, it aspires to be a reliable alternative to Knowledge (XXG). It may achieve this goal before the end of the century but it is still quite small. It does however have my complete set of articles on English spelling and
443:.) A real, and very common, mistake, though, is attempting to balance 'from' with a dash: 'from 1950–2010' means from that period to another, unstated time, but usually the intended meaning is 'from 1950 to 2010'. (A correct usage is: 'Membership jumped from 2,000–2,500 to almost 5,000'.) 1111:
Being in a good mood and feeling the urge to do something nice, I give you this barnstar that you earned every day w/o ever losing your temper like I and most editors have done on a regular basis. You always behave like an angel and I don't know how you do it in this crazy
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stands for. It is intended as a space saver in lieu of expressions like "around" and "approximately", especially in tables, captions etc., being neater than any word—including "ca." (pronounced "ka"?), which, Knowledge (XXG)'s MOS says, is not an acceptable alternative
452:. Proper capitalisation is important to distinguish the general from the particular: the Earth goes round the Sun, and if there's too much sun the earth dries out and develops cracks. Fans of different types of music often mistakenly capitalise them, from 75:
is a doddle/aesthetic imperative/primal urge. Many of my edits are difficult to spot in "diffs" as they involve inconspicuous punctuation changes, closing spaces before refs, etc., though I often feel the need to improve a lead (or "lede", from the Greek
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The look of wikilinks is no doubt relevant here: if the second word in the important-looking blue bit has a capital, maybe so should the first. It does look better with "the" outside the link in black, but as can be seen in editing mode, "the
362:(in the simple and thus more recent past) another thing. This reminded me of a nice puzzle, probably set in the sort of school (called a "grammar") where I did (I won't say learnt, and certainly not learned) Latin and Greek in the sixties: 898:?) And there are always writers who, without having the courtesy to consult us, insist on importing diacritics that in English are mere decoration, if that is not too polite a word, such as the pointless macron sometimes found on 1042: 1012: 637:(humbler words with fewer syllables). The misuse is usually advertised by the lack of a comma after it: "She likes cats, however she doesn't like dogs" instead of "but she doesn't like dogs". When this "however" 641:
the right word beginning a sentence, a comma will help distinguish it from "However many/often/hard...". Compare "however, it was done" with "however it was done...", the latter meaning "in whatever way it was
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To my dear teacher Rothorpe. Whilst flicking through your user page, I was horrified to see that I have never given you a star, especially when I think of the many times you have helped me and my FAC's,
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Wikilinks also cause people to be careless about punctuation following them, leaving out commas after parentheses, for example, especially after locations of locations, as for example in "A hotel in
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used for clarity between days (1 January 1234 – 31 December 2345). Nor should there be spaces when the hyphen - thus - is being used as a dash – and anyway an en dash—or em—cuts more of a dash.
1850: 567:" takes time and effort so would never become common practice. If only there had been a policy to leave out "the" from the page names in the first place; then we could have had "the 460:, probably because of the names of music charts ("#51 Country", etc.). There are those who capitalise the names of currencies, probably because many of them sound like proper nouns: 1840: 99: 733:
Anno Domini, which is Latin for "in the Year of our Lord", but actually it means After Doomsday, referring to the year 0, which the people who lived in the BC era dreaded—the
498: 521:. And some people like to use capitals to bombastically entitle their creations ("Welcome to The Rothorpe Page!" Ugh). Titles have the capital, names don't; compare the 591:) is particularly common in articles about America(ns); this is presumably because the abbreviated forms of states, as in "London, EN" and "Esposende, PT" (to take two 648:, especially in music articles, as narrative-style padding instead of the simple past tense: "In June they would release their 94th album". Change to "they released". 1855: 1845: 1637: 753:(the man with the US dictionry, sorry, U.S. dictionerry) is he didn't go far enough, and American spelling remains just as daft as British. (And punctuation just 212: 484: 295: 80:). I've also rescued a few good paragraphs discarded in the process of reverting vandalism; it's quite easy to paste from "diffs". And I expunge verbiage. 689:, a placeholder expression that should be changed or removed when information is updated (as of March 2014 => in March 2014; as of today => today). 734: 1586: 1117: 29: 1726: 1578: 434:, for example) and I never encountered this false distinction in pre-Wikipedian times (though omitting the article in speech—'July fifth'— 1790: 1598: 985: 503: 44: 1860: 1786: 1582: 1113: 1325:'Hates' is a little strong, but the fiddly comma separating the two numbers is neatly avoided by putting the month there instead. 1217:
For sticking it through during a long and tedious mediation while never losing your cool and remaining civil to all. Well done! ~
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was created on 19 July 2006, when I typed in my email name only to see it shockingly capitalised—but I quite like it now. I'm a
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punctuation mark after the year, though you wouldn't think so from a casual glance at Knowledge (XXG)—and logical dates go with
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Knowledge (XXG) is mostly a static, text medium, so its model should be print, not television or even other websites. Thus, I
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Thank you for your great copyediting, spontaneous, thorough, engaged, evaluating alternatives, to the point, - you are an
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Punctuation can make sense of this: Smith where Jones had had had had had had had had had had had the examiners approval.
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This motto reflects the inclusionist desire to change Knowledge (XXG) only when no knowledge would be lost as a result.
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examples) are not usually followed by a comma; but for obvious reasons WP doesn't encourage these abbreviations anyway.
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of various French imports. (It is perhaps the only arguably useful one as it distinguishes from the usual silent final
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between so-called American and British. Both styles (day first, month first) are correct in both varieties of English (
411: 341:, Day of Lies) I corrected an instance where an anonymous editor had changed "had had" to "had" with the edit summary 1767:
For your immediate willingness to help improving the English language of articles and your valuable copyediting work.
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sĂĄt, mĂąde, pĂ rk, cāst, Ă„ll, ĂŁir; sĂ©t, mĂȘ, vĂšin, fĂ«rn; sĂ­t, mĂźne, skĂŹ, bĂŻrd; sĂłng, mĂŽde, moĂŽn, lĂČve, foĂČt, wörd, Ər
345:(sic). This tense, consisting of "had" followed by a past participle (in this case another "had"), and known by 1510:
Thank you for your great copyediting, spontaneous, thorough, engaged, evaluating alternatives, to the point, --
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I hereby award this barnstar for your relentless silent work behind the lines to improve Knowledge (XXG).
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I try not to worry too much about American spelling in a British context and vice versa. The trouble with
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Two more things I do to improve legibility: insert compound-attributive-adjective-clarifying
1669: 1613: 1482: 1415: 625:—when and where it is too strong (being an adverb, not a conjunction) and needs changing to 517: 304: 263: 221: 58: 1401: 1169: 1130: 1772: 1661: 1296: 1033: 937: 480: 316: 259: 774: 559:: "When the name of a band requires the definite article, lowercase it in running text." 1270: 1233: 1204: 515:", but what I think was happening is that people were confusing names with titles, e.g. 1419: 1379: 1187: 1148: 1079: 949: 674: 669:
to "c." and will continue to do so unless or until it becomes normal usage. (Those who
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Today (2017's April Fools' Day, here in Portugal called with excellent literalness
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Thanks for helping the article improve to FA standards by your copyedit ! --
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Having corrected the English of students of many nationalities and handwritings,
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I am delighted to award you this Barnstar for consistent attention to detail.
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So, when the sources are unreliable, Knowledge (XXG) doesn't stand a chance.
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and I are extremely grateful for your diligent attention! All the best -
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and normalise meaningless hard-on-the-eye magazine-style chunks of
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Knowledge (XXG):Manual of Style/Capital letters#Composition titles
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type out the word can consider choosing a gizmo from the list at
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collapses". This omission (and its unwikilinked version too, see
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Reverting them feels cruel, integrating them feels foolish
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pronunciation, using the actual spelling instead of the
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Knowledge (XXG):Manual of Style#Brackets and parentheses
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Thanks Rothorpe! You assisted in various ways on the
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sĂșn, mĂ»se, fĂčll, pĂŒrr; neĆ”, áșant; gĂœm, mĆ·, keỳ, mĂżrrh
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for a good example of how to format a complex lead.)
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List of artworks known in English by a foreign title
1414:Thank you so much for your continuous copyedits to 1031:Three years ago, you were the 70th recipient of my 858:), though, was my fault, and now I conform and say 450:
Incorrect or Unnecessary Capital Letters like These
1800:, which translates to "with the preserved truth". 1545:I give you this Ukraine Barnstar for copy editing 1283:For the hilarious comment in your edit summary at 874:tendency to retain the acute accent on the final 1851:Wikipedians by alma mater: Peterhouse, Cambridge 935: 472:—in favour of the equally capitalised-sounding 468:(though those two have now vacated the scene— 971:Knowledge (XXG)'s changes in sound and vision 8: 1143:Many, many thanks for your constant work on 1841:Wikipedians who contribute to OpenStreetMap 1418:. It is really appreciated! Warm wishes, 296:Not So Much a Programme More a Way of Life 213:That's What Happened: Live in Germany 1987 1856:Knowledge (XXG) pending changes reviewers 1846:Knowledge (XXG) good article contributors 1595: 1350:". Forcing internal punctuation leads to 1094: 741:, and they all lived happily ever after. 333:The past perfect, pluperfect and a puzzle 890:, shouldn’t there be a different one on 575:Locations of locations; hyphens; italics 350:where it is (more elegantly) called the 1791:Association of Inclusionist Wikipedians 1749: 1354:. It's not a nationalistic style issue! 1526: 796:British pronunciations under threat: 381:, as, for example, on each side of a 7: 1713: 1687: 1657: 1626: 1435: 1328: 1305: 1105:The Random Acts of Kindness Barnstar 785:symbol with a ring to correspond to 1318:date format and finds it illogical. 886:, which itself traduces the French 812:(AmE rĂȘsearch); word under threat: 617:Knowledge (XXG)'s most abused words 986:User:Angr/Unified English Spelling 14: 1120:) 02:33, 23 September 2013 (UTC) 1067:The Tireless Contributor Barnstar 616: 1806: 1753: 1717: 1691: 1630: 1620:) 21:31, 12 December 2007 (UTC) 1596: 1527: 1496: 1464: 1439: 1400: 1364: 1269: 1232: 1203: 1194:) 04:06, 16 December 2012 (UTC) 1168: 1129: 1095: 1059: 1000: 919:I'm in favour of trivia sections 744: 922:People will add their pet facts 773:, and including a word list in 771:International Phonetic Alphabet 1775:) 08:32, 5 January 2012 (UTC) 1299:) 01:28, 30 August 2012 (UTC) 1: 1569:19:55, 24 February 2012 (UTC) 1518:) 09:02, 24 March 2012 (UTC) 1223:00:53, 3 November 2012 (UTC) 1053:) 08:29, 24 March 2015 (UTC) 1026:) 09:02, 24 March 2012 (UTC) 931:for trivia is the best policy 737:—whereas instead, of course, 425:foolish practice of changing 354:, but it's the same thing: I 1583:The Magnificent Clean-keeper 1260:21:41, 2 October 2012 (UTC) 808:(AmE prĂźvacy, cf. prĂźvate), 1487:17:42, 17 April 2012 (UTC) 1186:more readable. Thank you. 1159:) 15:25, 8 July 2013 (UTC) 496:And then there is the word 1877: 1761:The Working Man's Barnstar 1589:) 22:16, 29 May 2010 (UTC) 1549:Family of Yulia Tymoshenko 1184:Death of Jacintha Saldanha 777:. I invented this system: 112:Adam Holzman (keyboardist) 1752: 1606:The Copyeditor's Barnstar 1602: 1533: 1495: 1463: 1446:This user contributes to 1429:22:26, 11 May 2012 (UTC) 1408:The Copyeditor's Barnstar 1399: 1391:21:28, 9 July 2012 (UTC) 1363: 1268: 1231: 1202: 1176:The Copyeditor's Barnstar 1167: 1137:The Copyeditor's Barnstar 1128: 1101: 1058: 882:. But if you have one on 761:The Pedia and the Pendium 745:Webstr's unfinisht legacy 61:killed my voice, causing 1861:Inclusionist Wikipedians 1796:The motto of the AIW is 1727:pending changes reviewer 1246:Thanks for your help at 1086:11:28, 9 May 2014 (UTC) 34:the world's biggest city 1732:English Knowledge (XXG) 1287:. Thanks for the fix. 952:said it on BBC radio's 775:retroalphabetical order 556:Chicago Manual of Style 272:List of HMV POP artists 36:(well, that was on the 1590: 502:in running prose (see 326:The Last and the First 124:Carl Perkins (pianist) 87: 1817:This page plays at 55 1580: 1372:The Teamwork Barnstar 1277:The Original Barnstar 1240:the Original Barnstar 1211:the Civility Barnstar 870:*sĂąygwĂąy as "sĂȘeg".) 866:). (But I still read 545:, not to mention the 343:Grammar, Double "had" 195:Live at Montreux 2000 128:Cecil Gray (composer) 86: 1314:This user hates the 1252:promoted to FA today 90:Articles I started: 1798:conservata veritate 1789:is a member of the 1648:good article status 707:—then put it first! 369:Notes on formatting 358:something before I 321:Ivy Compton-Burnett 120:Betty Humby Beecham 1591: 1013:awesome Wikipedian 955:Test Match Special 826:WĂȘ hĂąte queĂ»ing Ășp 816:, pronounced like 781:(alas there is no 464:, for example, or 432:the Fourth of July 218:New Morning (club) 116:Bernard van Dieren 88: 1814: 1813: 1779: 1778: 1747: 1746: 1710: 1709: 1684: 1683: 1667:DĂ­Ă­ choyooĆ‚ÊŒÄŻÄŻhĂ­ 1654: 1653: 1624: 1623: 1575: 1574: 1522: 1521: 1491: 1490: 1458: 1457: 1433: 1432: 1395: 1394: 1358: 1357: 1322: 1321: 1303: 1302: 1264: 1263: 1227: 1226: 1198: 1197: 1163: 1162: 1124: 1123: 1090: 1089: 993:User talk:Corinne 832:(1917–2002) for * 800:(-tə, AmE -chr), 204:MĂ©dĂ©ric Collignon 174:GĂ©raldine Laurent 170:Edward Greenfield 155:Dominique Gaumont 46:), now living in 32:teacher born in 1868: 1826: 1825: 1821: 1810: 1809: 1781: 1780: 1757: 1750: 1743: 1740: 1721: 1714: 1703: 1695: 1688: 1658: 1634: 1627: 1600: 1593: 1592: 1567: 1560: 1550: 1537:Ukraine Barnstar 1531: 1524: 1523: 1500: 1493: 1492: 1485: 1468: 1461: 1460: 1451: 1443: 1436: 1422: 1416:Murder of Selena 1404: 1397: 1396: 1389: 1368: 1361: 1360: 1343:This user uses " 1340: 1334: 1329: 1306: 1293: 1273: 1266: 1265: 1258: 1236: 1229: 1228: 1221: 1207: 1200: 1199: 1172: 1165: 1164: 1133: 1126: 1125: 1099: 1092: 1091: 1082: 1063: 1056: 1055: 1036: 1004: 739:along came Jesus 735:end of the world 518:The Great Gatsby 379:unsightly spaces 339:Dia das Mentiras 305:Timothy Birdsall 132:Charlie Parker's 59:laryngeal cancer 42:50th of the 20th 1876: 1875: 1871: 1870: 1869: 1867: 1866: 1865: 1831: 1830: 1823: 1819: 1818: 1801: 1748: 1738: 1735: 1711: 1701: 1698:This user is a 1685: 1655: 1640:helped promote 1570: 1565: 1558: 1554: 1548: 1483: 1459: 1449: 1420: 1387: 1359: 1348:quotation marks 1336: 1335: 1332: 1323: 1289: 1256: 1219: 1080: 1034: 1029: 1028: 1010: 1005: 967: 965:Nocturnal links 946: 936:"The batsman's 916: 846:, rhyming with 763: 747: 730: 705:better known as 699:most well known 665:). So I change 619: 577: 494: 407:bracket clashes 371: 335: 317:Figueira (Faro) 12: 11: 5: 1874: 1872: 1864: 1863: 1858: 1853: 1848: 1843: 1833: 1832: 1829: 1828: 1812: 1811: 1804: 1777: 1776: 1764: 1763: 1758: 1745: 1744: 1730:rights on the 1724:This user has 1722: 1712: 1708: 1707: 1696: 1686: 1682: 1681: 1665: 1656: 1652: 1651: 1635: 1625: 1622: 1621: 1609: 1608: 1603: 1601: 1573: 1572: 1544: 1540: 1539: 1534: 1532: 1520: 1519: 1507: 1506: 1501: 1489: 1488: 1478: 1477: 1469: 1456: 1455: 1444: 1434: 1431: 1430: 1411: 1410: 1405: 1393: 1392: 1380:Paul McCartney 1375: 1374: 1369: 1356: 1355: 1353: 1352:factual errors 1341: 1327: 1320: 1319: 1312: 1304: 1301: 1300: 1285:Odeon Records‎ 1280: 1279: 1274: 1262: 1261: 1243: 1242: 1237: 1225: 1224: 1214: 1213: 1208: 1196: 1195: 1179: 1178: 1173: 1161: 1160: 1140: 1139: 1134: 1122: 1121: 1108: 1107: 1102: 1100: 1088: 1087: 1070: 1069: 1064: 999: 998: 997: 996: 995: 989: 983: 978: 973: 966: 963: 950:Brian Johnston 945: 934: 933: 932: 926: 923: 920: 915: 912: 804:(AmE harĂĄss), 762: 759: 746: 743: 729: 726: 725: 724: 714: 708: 702: 696: 690: 684: 678: 675:Template:Circa 649: 643: 618: 615: 576: 573: 539:Ancient Romans 493: 490: 489: 488: 445: 444: 441:logical quotes 420: 419: 402: 401: 370: 367: 334: 331: 244:Terry Stafford 240:String-A-Longs 164:Ebony Concerto 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1873: 1862: 1859: 1857: 1854: 1852: 1849: 1847: 1844: 1842: 1839: 1838: 1836: 1816: 1815: 1805: 1803: 1799: 1794: 1792: 1788: 1783: 1782: 1774: 1770: 1766: 1765: 1762: 1759: 1756: 1751: 1741: 1733: 1729: 1728: 1723: 1720: 1716: 1715: 1705: 1704: 1697: 1694: 1690: 1689: 1679: 1676:biƂ bĂ©Ă©hĂłzin 1675: 1672: 1671: 1666: 1663: 1660: 1659: 1649: 1645: 1644: 1639: 1636: 1633: 1629: 1628: 1619: 1615: 1611: 1610: 1607: 1604: 1599: 1594: 1588: 1584: 1579: 1571: 1568: 1563: â€ą  1562: 1561: 1552: 1551: 1542: 1541: 1538: 1535: 1530: 1525: 1517: 1513: 1509: 1508: 1505: 1502: 1499: 1494: 1486: 1480: 1479: 1476: 1474: 1470: 1467: 1462: 1453: 1452: 1450:OpenStreetMap 1445: 1442: 1438: 1437: 1428: 1426: 1423: 1417: 1413: 1412: 1409: 1406: 1403: 1398: 1390: 1384: 1381: 1377: 1376: 1373: 1370: 1367: 1362: 1351: 1349: 1347: 1342: 1339: 1331: 1330: 1326: 1317: 1313: 1311: 1308: 1307: 1298: 1294: 1292: 1286: 1282: 1281: 1278: 1275: 1272: 1267: 1259: 1253: 1249: 1245: 1244: 1241: 1238: 1235: 1230: 1222: 1216: 1215: 1212: 1209: 1206: 1201: 1193: 1189: 1185: 1181: 1180: 1177: 1174: 1171: 1166: 1158: 1154: 1150: 1146: 1142: 1141: 1138: 1135: 1132: 1127: 1119: 1115: 1110: 1109: 1106: 1103: 1098: 1093: 1085: 1083: 1077: 1072: 1071: 1068: 1065: 1062: 1057: 1054: 1052: 1048: 1044: 1041: 1040: 1037: 1027: 1025: 1021: 1016: 1014: 1009: 1003: 994: 990: 987: 984: 982: 979: 977: 974: 972: 969: 968: 964: 962: 959: 957: 956: 951: 943: 940:the bowler's 939: 930: 927: 924: 921: 918: 917: 913: 911: 909: 908: 903: 902: 897: 893: 889: 885: 881: 877: 871: 869: 865: 861: 857: 853: 849: 845: 841: 840: 835: 829: 827: 823: 819: 815: 811: 807: 803: 799: 794: 792: 788: 784: 780: 776: 772: 767: 760: 758: 756: 752: 742: 740: 736: 727: 722: 718: 715: 712: 709: 706: 703: 700: 697: 694: 691: 688: 685: 682: 679: 676: 672: 668: 664: 659: 655: 654: 650: 647: 644: 640: 636: 632: 628: 624: 621: 620: 614: 612: 611: 607: 603: 602: 596: 594: 590: 586: 582: 574: 572: 570: 566: 561: 558: 557: 552: 548: 544: 540: 536: 532: 528: 524: 520: 519: 514: 509: 505: 501: 500: 491: 486: 482: 481:and asteroids 479: 475: 471: 467: 463: 459: 455: 451: 447: 446: 442: 437: 433: 429: 428: 422: 421: 417: 416:PAIS Alliance 413: 408: 404: 403: 399: 395: 391: 387: 384: 383:stroke/slash/ 380: 376: 375: 374: 368: 366: 363: 361: 357: 353: 348: 344: 340: 332: 330: 329: 327: 322: 318: 314: 310: 309:Miscellaneous 306: 302: 298: 297: 292: 288: 284: 282: 277: 273: 269: 265: 261: 257: 253: 249: 248:Record labels 245: 241: 237: 233: 232: 227: 223: 219: 215: 214: 209: 205: 201: 200:Martin Lovett 197: 196: 191: 187: 183: 179: 175: 171: 167: 165: 160: 156: 152: 148: 144: 143: 138: 137: 133: 129: 125: 121: 117: 113: 109: 105: 101: 97: 96:Back-chaining 93: 85: 81: 79: 74: 69: 67: 64: 60: 56: 52: 51: 48:a very small 45: 43: 39: 35: 31: 27: 23: 22: 19: 1797: 1795: 1784: 1760: 1725: 1699: 1677: 1673: 1668: 1641: 1605: 1559:Yulia Romero 1556: 1546: 1543: 1536: 1512:Gerda Arendt 1503: 1471: 1447: 1407: 1371: 1345: 1337: 1324: 1309: 1290: 1276: 1239: 1210: 1175: 1145:Terry-Thomas 1136: 1112:environment. 1104: 1076:such as here 1066: 1047:Gerda Arendt 1032: 1030: 1020:Gerda Arendt 1017: 1007: 1006: 988:, nice essay 960: 953: 947: 905: 899: 895: 891: 887: 883: 879: 875: 872: 867: 863: 859: 855: 847: 843: 837: 830: 825: 821: 817: 813: 809: 805: 801: 797: 795: 790: 786: 782: 778: 764: 748: 731: 720: 716: 710: 704: 698: 692: 686: 680: 670: 666: 663:ça ne va pas 662: 657: 652: 651: 645: 638: 634: 630: 626: 622: 608: 605: 599: 597: 585:Saudi Arabia 578: 554: 551:the Troubles 516: 507: 497: 495: 478:trojan moons 449: 435: 427:date formats 424: 423:deplore the 414:). (And see 406: 397: 389: 378: 372: 364: 359: 355: 342: 338: 336: 324: 308: 294: 287:Gerald Cross 280: 275: 247: 236:Steve Hunter 231:Mid-Eighties 229: 226:Robert Wyatt 222:Piltdown Men 211: 193: 178:Jay Berliner 166:(Stravinsky) 163: 142:Bird Is Free 140: 136:Bird Symbols 134: 103: 91: 89: 70: 49: 16: 15: 1670:DinĂ© Bizaad 1643:Chuck Berry 1614:TerriersFan 1566:Talk to me! 1504:copyediting 1484:Redtigerxyz 1475:says Thanks 1182:For making 1008:copyediting 981:MOS:NUMERAL 766:Citizendium 513:The Beatles 504:WP:THEMUSIC 283:(TV series) 208:Miles Davis 186:Lou Johnson 182:Josh MacRae 147:Denis Colin 73:copyediting 57:. In 2003, 1835:Categories 1248:Pink Floyd 728:AB or CDE? 721:notability 547:Punic Wars 531:Roundheads 352:pluperfect 276:Television 108:Ace Cannon 1638:This user 1338:US vs. UK 1250:. It was 1188:Rayabhari 1149:Cassianto 1081:Cassianto 929:Apartheid 810:resĂ«arch 717:notoriety 589:MOS:COMMA 535:Cavaliers 313:Alan Odle 252:Dimension 159:Earl-Jean 26:nocturnal 1316:mm/dd/yy 1310:mm/dd/yy 1153:SchroCat 896:Penelope 806:prĂ­vacy 798:ĂĄmateur 693:multiple 533:and the 394:ellipsis 356:had done 301:Ted Lune 291:Mezzo TV 264:Spotlite 190:Lou Reed 151:Dolceola 92:Language 55:Portugal 28:retired 1822:⁄ 1702:Petrean 1346:logical 1147:. Both 1035:Pumpkin 991:Amiga: 938:holding 892:epitome 862:(= BrE 856:spĂȘaker 854:(= BrE 802:hĂĄrass 711:between 635:whereas 623:however 610:italics 601:hyphens 569:Beatles 565:Beatles 527:Stuarts 523:BrontĂ«s 448:remove 405:remove 386:solidus 268:Warwick 260:Palette 66:marxism 40:of the 1739:verify 1473:Ahalya 1388:GabeMc 1257:GabeMc 1220:GabeMc 976:MOS:LQ 914:Trivia 888:Ă©migrĂ© 884:emigrĂ© 864:spĂźker 836:(like 642:done". 631:though 543:Druids 541:, the 537:, the 529:, the 525:, the 470:almost 458:jungle 377:close 256:Herald 50:cidade 21:thorpe 1785:This 1769:JCAla 1291:78.26 1043:Prize 948:When 942:willy 901:Māori 868:sĂšguĂš 860:SpĂźca 852:SpĂŹca 848:NĂźgel 844:RĂźgel 839:RĂȘgal 834:RĂŹgel 814:queĂ»e 687:as of 667:circa 653:circa 646:would 581:Mecca 511:"See 462:franc 281:BBC-3 104:Music 78:ληΎης 63:Harpo 38:100th 1827:rpm. 1787:user 1773:talk 1618:talk 1587:talk 1516:talk 1421:Jona 1333:"
"! 1297:talk 1254:! ~ 1192:talk 1157:talk 1118:talk 1114:TMCk 1051:talk 1045:, -- 1024:talk 894:and 755:daft 751:Noah 671:must 474:euro 466:mark 454:jazz 139:and 1674:doo 1646:to 1425:yo! 1383:FAC 1039:Sky 910:). 907:Mao 850:. * 828:). 818:cĂ»e 789:); 757:.) 719:is 633:or 627:but 593:USY 549:or 508:The 499:the 492:The 456:to 398:are 390:non 360:did 347:EFL 323:'s 315:, 307:; 228:'s 210:'s 192:'s 122:, 68:. 53:in 30:EFL 1837:: 1678:da 1664:-0 1662:nv 1555:— 1018:-- 1015:! 824:: 822:Ășp 793:. 681:as 677:.) 658:c. 639:is 629:, 613:. 583:, 436:is 319:, 311:: 303:, 299:, 293:, 289:, 285:, 278:: 274:; 270:; 266:, 262:, 258:, 254:, 250:: 246:; 242:, 238:, 234:, 224:, 220:, 216:, 206:, 202:, 198:, 188:, 184:, 180:, 176:, 172:, 168:, 161:, 157:, 153:, 149:, 145:, 130:, 126:, 118:, 114:, 110:, 106:: 102:; 98:, 94:: 18:Ro 1824:5 1820:1 1793:. 1771:( 1742:) 1736:( 1734:. 1706:. 1680:. 1650:. 1616:( 1585:( 1514:( 1454:. 1295:( 1190:( 1155:( 1116:( 1049:( 1022:( 944:" 880:e 876:e 787:Ă„ 783:o 661:( 487:. 328:.

Index

Ro
thorpe
nocturnal
EFL
the world's biggest city
100th
50th of the 20th

a very small cidade
Portugal
laryngeal cancer
Harpo
marxism
copyediting
ληΎης

Back-chaining
List of artworks known in English by a foreign title
Ace Cannon
Adam Holzman (keyboardist)
Bernard van Dieren
Betty Humby Beecham
Carl Perkins (pianist)
Cecil Gray (composer)
Charlie Parker's
Bird Symbols
Bird Is Free
Denis Colin
Dolceola
Dominique Gaumont

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