Knowledge (XXG)

User talk:NSH001/Archive 5

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4560:. The young consultant surgeon who spoke to me after the op, seemed to be very enthusiastic about this procedure. The procedure is so new (and very expensive, I have no doubt) that it doesn't have a wiki article yet. Basically they use this very powerful laser to destroy everything inside the prostate, except the outer skin. Sounds very attractive – no chance of it ever growing back, no more PSA tests, no more PSA scares if it shows a high reading, no more obstruction to the flow, no chance of getting prostate cancer. He gave me a lot of detailed information, more than I can remember in my drug-befuddled state, but as per usual, I will get a copy of the letter he sends to my GP. So I should know more when I finally get the letter. They always send them second-class, so I'll still have to wait several more days for it. Bring back the days of the non-privatised Royal Mail – I can remember when you could write a local letter in the morning, and receive a reply the same day. (People did this because it was so much cheaper than a phone call.) The BPH is one of the reasons that I sometimes edit Knowledge (XXG) at very odd times of the day, like 4am or 5am (having to get up in the middle of the night to pee). So no more of that, either. I've had clinical symtoms of BPH since my mid-thirties. The sort of thing that slowly gets worse as you get older, but in recent years my symptoms have been stable, and I've learned to live with them. But the hernia op seems to have been thing that finally triggered my prostate into its final protest. I went into urinary retention a few weeks after the hernia op, and have had to wear a catheter ever since. I failed the Trial without Catheter (TWOC) test very badly. I regard getting rid of the catheter as the biggest benefit from the forthcoming operation. Catheters stop you doing almost everything normal – no hard exercise (but limited walking is OK), I can't use my bicycle – my normal mode of transport. And after several months, catheters start to hurt, especially when they move, which reduces exercise even further. And I'm very glad I don't have to face the choice of whether or not to have a 802:
party of its historic 'residue' of 'outdated' 'Marxist' beliefs about the 'system'. In doing this they throw the baby out with the bathwater, transforming themselves into essentially the 'responsible' 'realistic', 'pragmatic' voice for the kind of ideology they share with the right wing. As soon as the left shifts to the 'centre', the right swerves further to the right, and new 'left' adapts to that too, trailing after every shift of its historic adversary. The result is the kind of sharp-nosed, Wall-Street accredited hucksterism that tries to root out and rout the Corbyns in their ranks as 'ideological' drift wood that worries 'markets' and undermines prospects of real power. Blair, that clown Renzi in Italy, Trudeau, the pathetic Democrats in the US and the laughable 'centrists' in Israel. A serious modern left went out with the passage of men of the caliber of Gough Whitlam in Australia, Pierre Trudeau in Canada, and Helmut Schmidt in Germany. What these reformers don't notice is that is being the conservative version of a rightwing vision of the state, they will always be outrun by 'conservatives' on the right who go so far right that they end up embracing, in their rhetoric, a kind of radical populism that appeals to the struggling social majority which once constituted the basis of socialist parties. The result is a paradox, with, discursively, the Right seizing the left's historic constituencies, while the 'left' woos the residual metropolitan middle class.
2386:: my excellent 9-year-old laptop died, not repairable according to my nearest computer repair shop (and I believe them). Even worse, I had neglected to take a backup. How stupid can you get? I thought I had completely lost my script, and had resigned myself to having to write it all again from scratch. Got quite depressed at having "lost" so much work (not just the script: my Thunderbird e-mail database (2 million emails, going back to the 1990s), hundreds of spreadsheets, Word documents, PDFs, simple text notes, etc., etc.). But I did manage (eventually) to dig them all back out of the grave. Heave big sigh of relief. Too soon – it never occured to me that the script wouldn't work under Windows 10! Perhaps it might, but I'm not willing to put in the time to find out. It uses three pieces of software: the first ("A") I've been wanting to ditch for years, and had already done some heavy lifting work towards that end, which also had the nice bonus of speeding my script up by a factor of two. The second bit of software ("B") has had a major update, which I would like to take advantage of, but the first bit (A) requires me to stick with the earlier version. So I thought I might as well do it now: (a) remove all dependency on A and (b) refactor the script to be able to use the new release of B. Even if it means I won't be able to use the script for several weeks while I'm working on it. 505:
the technical details. I can quickly think of one way it can be done, but that requires a collaborator at the requisite geographical distance (I see that NomdeA is using a mobile - something I hadn't noticed at the time of the SPI) in charge of a mobile device. There are, however, a few edits from the NomdeA account which have not been made from a mobile, and it would be interesting to know what IP addresses they were from. A while ago I had considered raising it via Arbcom rather than SPI, but left it, as A/ the account was not active and B/ the account is under intense scrutiny, both off-wiki and on-wiki. I have no doubt that Cross has the backing of very powerful forces who have the resources to enable him to fool the Checkuser tool, and that there are many ways to do this besides the one I have thought of. I am also aware that so many people have been so pissed off for so long by the way that Cross has, in their view, been abusing Knowledge (XXG) that they are considering starting a class action lawsuit against Cross, and probably also against the WMF for allowing the abuse to continue. I wouldn't be surprised if such a court case reveals some very interesting details of how Cross is working. I have to go out very shortly now, but will certainly be looking at this more closely when I get back. Thanks for the note. --
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herders out of their biblical wilderness. In that letter, Seneca recounts the case of a German who, captured, was taken in chains back to Rome and forced to become a gladiator. The task assigned him was to slaughter (or be slaughtered by) wild animals imported from Africa. In the 'normal' world, at least, one might think, bravery in arms against mere 'beasts' was better than nothing. Something however must have stuck in his craw, to make a bad pun. Perhaps engaging in exterminatory cruelty to an endless array of animals to the applause and delight of snacking Romans relieving their taedium vitae by a bit of macabre voyeurism on afternoons. In any case, there was only one moment in the day of such gladiators when they could sneak away from the meticulous surveillance (as valuable tradable goods among sports entrepreneurs etc.) they were subjected to. He asked permission to go to the craphouse before his turn on the Coliseum's stage came up. Once accorded permission, he entered the cesspit, and stuck the sponge-tipped stick (
921:, which normally should only be used to display actual Arabic script (obvious, really, since the template is there to tell your browser, and any other software like spell-checkers and screen readers for the blind, that it's dealing with a foreign language and not English). So I fixed that, and added the transliteration option, which I think was your original intention. The other offender was a "[ [" which should have read "[[", hence was not recognised as an opening bracket pair.The error you mentioned is almost certainly an invisible unicode control character; this usually happens when you copy-paste from Microsoft Word or similar word processor. You can get rid of it, as I've explained before, by using the backspace or delete key (the message even tells you exactly where it is), but I didn't bother, as mah wee gurl now handles it.As usual, she has offered up the usual delicious array of red question marks for your delectation. 4691:
that, and it discourages politicians from searching for a real solution. Russia’s thinking seems no different to Israel’s in 1967 – a confused mix of strategic defence and nationalist ideas about the heartland, which make it feel right to the aggressor and terrible to the victims. Neither should have been allowed, but as a wider world we have shown that we are not willing to go to war to protect the international law-based world order, against either allies or powerful adversaries. Only against weak adversaries, where there is a financial or propagandistic benefit. So we find ourselves in a terrible mess. We are of course willing to encourage and fund the Ukrainian people to sacrifice themselves for the greater good. The only thing which is certain is that the Ukrainian people are being mistreated by their friends and enemies alike.
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the computers had gone missing and the offices weren't properly set up. "The few computers that were in the office were the oldest ones possible and they kept crashing all the time", a former senior adviser to Jeremy Corbyn tells me. "The situation was so dire that one time after a day on the road with Jeremy I came back to find that a new colleague had taken my screen because he didn't have one." The situation in John McDonnell's offices was even worse. "When we took up the offices they were completely gutted of their contents. There were only half pulled out staples in the walls and bits of blue tack. The desks were without chairs let alone computers and I had to work off my own mobile and laptop", my former colleague James Mills, who was John McDonnell's Head of Communications, remembers all too well.
337:, one of the most spectacular routes in Europe, and a bicycle is the best way to experience it. It was about 80 miles and very hilly, and would not have been possible without the fuel from a huge English breakfast in Gibraltar. The yellow Michelin map was misleading: it correctly showed a 700m climb to about the same altitude as Ronda; what it didn't show was another 3 or 4 valleys with a similar descent/ascent, so I didn't arrive in Ronda till about 10pm (not a problem in Spain, where they start their evening meal at about midnight). But cycling in the dark meant getting a nasty electric shock through the handlebars if I went too fast downhill – the lamp/dynamo system had special circuitry to divert excess power via the bike frame, to avoid blowing the bulb. Worth it, though, for the experience. -- 2139:
with a neighbour I caught sight of a turtle dove biding its time, to and fro, in my upper gardens. Some weeks back, my neighbor told me a cat had climbed a tree in my kitchenfront garden where a pair had been nesting. I had to erect a complex net of fragile branches around it, up a metre and a half, so if the cat retried that lurk, it would leap onto false branches and fall out of the tree and leave the turtle doves to their eggs. It appears to have worked, because, making myself invisible, I noted that the turtle dove skirting my gardens finally flew back into the tree (which I wanted to chainsaw this spring but have had to delay doing so). The world's a dark place: gardens - and watching what happens in them - do indeed keep the spirit up. Best
776:, and is not really part of West Kilbride. There was a girl in the same year group as me, all the way through primary and secondary school, who also came from Thirdpart. Her family had a smallholding there (from memory, of about 12 acres), very fertile agricultural land. You could see Thirdpart, about 2 miles away, from my parents' bedroom window. I can remember her first name, but can't be sure of her surname. It's quite likely it was McNicol, but I can't be sure (it was more than half a century ago). So it is quite possible I attended school with McNicol's paternal aunt. She was a nice girl, very likeable, quite a contrast with her appalling nephew (if he really is her nephew). 1217:, for a university assignment. The article has been significantly edited by another Knowledge (XXG) user, specifically regarding the references and in-text citations/endnotes (I originally used Turabian style sourcing, but the user has changed this). However, the user did not explain what specifically was incorrect within the original citations that I inserted into the articles–as a student I would like to understand what I could improve upon. A fellow university peer of mine stated that YOU have significantly aided them in editing their citations, therefore I am kindly asking if you could check out the 867:. Note that /examples is a sub-page of /ETVP, which is itself a sub-page of my user page. I started with /examples, as looking at actual examples is often the best way of understanding how something works. Note that the documentation will eventually require many different subpages, which will all be under the /ETVP sub-page.The thread above was never intended to act as a documentation page. Rather it started off as a thread like any other, but when Doc James didn't respond, it slowly developed into a place where I could dump my frustration at the ovewhelming presence on Knowledge (XXG) of the 301:. So the neologism would mean, to the philologically adept, 'sweet patroness of the art of copyediting.' (when I was a boy, the clan consensus was that I probably made good jokes, but that you needed a dictionary to work out where the laugh was:). But I toss it your way seriously. Prospective names are best fished up intuitively, in a satori moment that synthesizes unconscious mulling's infinite gameplay. It takes me weeks, sometimes a month, to work out a pet's name from its pristine behavior. Nomen is, after all, an omen, and an amen. (Lucky I'm childless!) Best 4676:
warmongering mass hysteria over Ukraine. I found the pictures from Parliament of the "address" by Zelensky sickening and disgusting, absolutely revolting. The mass hysteria in all the mass media news outlets is terrifying, especially the BBC. Talk about Orwell's two minutes of hate. Now we've got 24/7 anti-Russia hate. And the vast majority of the people fall for the lies, mindlessly displaying blue-and-yellow flags as if it was a football team. It's unbearable, and very, very depressing. Off to bed now. --
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got this far, I wan't going to turn back. Had the surgery on Sunday afternoon, at first everything looked fine, but after a few hours a lump appeared again, almost as big as the original hernia. Was surprised when the (male) nurse dismissed it as not important (BTW, I have the highest praise for all the nursing staff; but this guy was definitely an exception). The most likely explanations were either (a) the hernia repair had failed or (b) internal bleeding (it very definitely wasn't what is described in
4648: 320:) to be doing this but we thought they still deserved support at a personal level, and couldn't condemn their use of violence given the environment in which they found themselves. No shortage of horrific regimes in Latin America, all supported by the US; Chomsky was writing a lot about them at the time. One of the things that caused me difficulty back then, given my lack of knowledge about the Catholic church (no Knowledge (XXG)!) was my lamentable ignorance of orders such as the 3290:). Falling blood pressure and falling blood counts were pointing to internal bleeding. Sent me for an immediate MRI scan, which seemed to confirm the internal bleeding diagnosis. According to other patients in the ward, I looked in a pretty bad state. They called the surgeon back in, and I went in for emergency surgery at 10pm. Very scary talk with anaesthetist about all the horrible possibilities that they might find had gone wrong – worst case scenario being weeks in 4453: 3133: 1059: 1916:
would be, with the subscription model, impossible. Only one blighter refused to yield up the goods. Apart from that, I hate any red signaling that flashes for the reader a problem, on pages that strive to be written so that all outstanding problems are solved. As soon as I see'em, as your marking of the aboriginal articles enables me to detect them, I fix them. I don't know why I can use the standard Haaretz url. I accept cookies whenever I'm asked to.
31: 2373:, sorry for the delay in replying, the reason will be clear in a moment. The answer is "yes, sort of, but ...": I have (or had) a script that does this sort of thing, but so far it has always been private to me; I am happy (within reason) to run it on a specific article for anyone who asks nicely. On the other hand, I don't want to be overwhelmed with such requests, which is why I haven't been advertising it. For more info, see the very long 3895: 3806: 3733: 3661: 3544: 3342: 3054: 2854: 2171: 1950: 1762: 1261: 969: 1846:
hundreds of reports of Nawi haranguing these kids, I've only encountered one case among what must be thousands, of a lad looking on, and allowing a glance of perplexity to cross his brow, when the evil they were innocuously doing as a matter of duty was carefully pointed out by that remarkable, simple, humble decent man. I've never read any account of diasporic life where this obtuse moral insouciance emerges as typical.
4505:... about my surgery on Sunday 6th, the operation went "perfectly" so I'm told (and I believe them). The final op (and least serious) in a series of 3 to deal with kidney stones and bladder stones. Strangely, this time I had no pain at all with the kidney stones, in stark contrast to the kidney stones I had 25+ yrs ago, where the pain was excruciating (think of a bad toothache – abcess under the tooth – 10 times worse). 3505: 4295: 3418: 2794: 3192:
complications (it takes 90mins to get to the hospital from here). Gave a COVID test sample this morning, and I'm under strict instructions to self-isolate till Saturday. The backlog due to ops being cancelled because of COVID means I've had to wait about 5 months longer than normal, during which time the hernia has got a lot bigger (no pain at all, fortunately). Better late than never. ... --
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side. Was able to get an appointment to see the specialist surgeon very quickly, I am much more impressed with him than the guy who did the op the last time. There is a possibility he might be able to fix whatever went wrong last time, but the scan he arranged turned out to be not of much help. Likely to be a long wait for the operation, thanks to Covid. We shall see.
599:('those who listen (closely), will overcome obstacles in the end/ though I can't help with Italianized ears overhearing it as 'who listens, makes the right inferences) but I can't listen in here, since my browser is denied Twitter access. But I take your word for it that some lady associated with decency has achieved some improvement in her political ranking. 925: 4383: 4225: 4152: 4070: 3983: 3906: 3817: 3744: 3672: 3555: 3353: 3065: 2865: 2182: 1961: 1773: 1272: 980: 3316:
steady as she goes. Take it easy. Give wiki the flick arse for at least a month, and even then, don't trouble too much about getting back on duty and its duress here. Of course, once one's gets over that aspect of this joint, it does afford one comic relief, even in its pathetic moments. Best wishes for a speedy recovery
4728:, who, as a former weapons inspector – contrast the recent UNSC meeting – actually knows what he's talking about. Right at the end, he comments about US and UK military personnel training Ukranian neo-Nazis. Perhaps the trainers themselves were unaware of their neo-Nazi background, or didn't care, but 1173:
average inability to perceive the obvious. Like our olfactory senses, this hunter's capacity to interpret the spours in one's environment to work out what is going on, seems to have been elided as one of the collateral side effects of civilization. Evolution as devolution, or should that be devolition?
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When they phoned to tell me the surgery had been postponed for a day, I had assumed I would still be getting the same surgeon, so I was surprised they sprang a new one on me. I was looking forward to having the original surgeon, as we'd built up a relationship, and I trusted him. Not good, but having
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Thanks for the kind wishes, S. I have some idea what to expect, since I had a hernia fixed on the other side, several years ago. No pain at all if you don't move, but as soon as you move, agonising pain. That stage lasts about 2 days. Pain then gradually reduces over about a week. I was warned not to
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the ARIJ cite, and at the same time removed the Friends of the Earth 2013 cite, which has two sfns pointing to it. I copied the latter back in (for now, in case you really do want it, and to avoid any red q marks), and told my mythical young lady to get on with it. So she did her usual fixes; she's a
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Ah, silly me, I was so anxious to get out I didn't think to look at the red ink at the bottom of the page. That would have been trivially easy to fix (as someone else has already done). Oops! Mustard mitt I wondered what the problem really was, and got bogged down with the tricky detail at the start.
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On the links to Haaretz, I think I know why they appear to be free-to-read to you, but not to me, namely that you have your browser set to disable cookies (either specifically for Haaretz, or more generally), whereas I, being lazy, just accept cookies regardless. So I can access Haaretz by the simple
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from memory) used for scrubbing the shithole there, right down his throat, and choked himself to death rather than do his job of killing creatures. Nawi had that kind of nature, and was never forgiven. There is something very Roman about the IDF and its ritual desensitivization of human instincts: in
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While eating a few minutes ago somewhat dutifully a slice of meat pie I'd cooked yesterday (using for once a glutin-free flour because part of the result was intended as a gift to a relative with an allergy - unfortunately the pastry spoiled the repaste, though the mince, onion, peas, dash of garlic,
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Quite refreshing to read your post. I feel the same about the hysteria. Everyone is suddenly an expert, on an incredibly complex topic they knew nothing about two weeks ago. Personally I despise the media’s “good vs evil” or “sane vs crazy” approach to conflict reporting. Life just doesn’t work like
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That's great news, N. I remember when I couldn't find any Tom bowlers for a game of marbles, eyeing a glass in which my father's large kidney stones were proudly exhibited, and trying one out as an ersatz. Nah, too fragile. That's certainly been a 'rough trot' and keep us posted about the final one.
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Thanks but damnit. I much prefer the first example, and am tempted to be wahl-eared and go for the aesthetic quality of a visually neat page. Really, what diff does it make if a reader clicks and finds a page in a different language or just 'sees red', which means no info, pal, stiff cheddar? After
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Thanks. It's a small consolation that the pain will diminish with time, though it never goes away completely. I lost my mother (to breast cancer) when I was only 28. It still hurts to think about it after so many years, but I know she would have wanted me to get on with my life, after shedding a few
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When I'd started previous jobs I'd arrive to some kind of handover notes. But when Corbyn and McDonnell walked in on day one, the small team that had joined after working on Corbyn's leadership campaign turned up to find that someone had prepared for our arrival in a more unconventional way: many of
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are making me sick in more than one way. They are slowly, bit-by-tiny-bit destroying the NHS, and hoping that nobody notices. I can see that the NHS staff are coping heroically with the non-stop squeeze in their budgets, but there's a limit to how far that can go. And of course I am sickened by the
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Though I can't speak for others, a few of us must be wondering, as I certainly am, about your convalescence. No need to publish private details. But a word that you're come through the ordeal would be appreciated. it's hard enough editing here, without the larger and more important issue of friends
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If you captured Abu So-and-So, you'd be able to say within a minute, "Hey, I know your uncle is this person, who we really want to get to. If you can tell me where this person is right now, we'll give you a break and even let you go." And often, that would be what Abu So-and-So would do, because it
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Another pleasant surprise this morning. The tree the other side of the road from my humble abode has finally come out in full blossom, at last. I thought there might have been something wrong with it, as it's been blossoming the last 2 weeks or so, but only on a very small scale. It's a spectacular
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Some good news: my weight loss programme has been so successful that I've been able to come off my long-term blood pressure meds completely. I was expecting to be able to reduce the dose, so a nice surprise to be shot of them. The bad news is that another hernia has appeared, this time on the other
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6 October 2020.(' The US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, says that non-Americans like Assange do not enjoy First Amendment rights to free expression.') I understand thugs pretty will, dickheads in power who don't know the meaning, if any, of the sentences they spout. What is harder to grasp is the
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Oh boy, I've only just seen your message, and taken a quick look at NomdeA's latest contributions, now he really is "extracting the Michael". I think, and have thought, that the NomdeA account has been screaming "SOCKPUPPET" at the top of its voice ever since it started up. We can only speculate re
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Interesting to compare how medical technology has changed since last time. Laparascopic surgery definitely reduces the pain levels. I've decided to come off the pain killers completely, since they mess up one's digestive system, and the small level of pain is easily tolerable. Should probably have
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allows for disambiguation (on first sight I was annoyed at the poor design of that template, so didn't bother to look more closely). Even that isn't a perfect solution, as you still get the same potential problems that might arise with any disambiguation. I've only just noticed that you've already
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Hello there , Neil. Hope this finds you well. I think you once helped me out with a template to make normal blue names of people mentioned, who have a wiki article but in another language. Apparently the convention has changed. In an article I’m writing now, for example, these don’t work. Have I
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I found that the subscription format cancelled my ability to read all those articles, and I had to take the title and google it, on which Haaretz gave me the content, which I then had to download for private copies, since otherwise all of the verification I need to do in tinkering with the article
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I was reading Seneca's 70th epistle last night and was mulling over, as a result, that praeternatural ability to watch and indeed even inflict pain or suffering with the kind of blank nonchalance typified by Israeli soldiers who patrol the South Hebron area and assist settlers in tormenting simple
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Thanks for picking up on Nawi's death and adding that section. Somehow I missed that, though every few months I always checked to see if anything about that extraordinary Noble Peace Prize winner manqué, had caught the distracted eyes of the news media. Perhaps I missed it because he died within a
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Where to start? Well, I've got plenty of time to cogitate over the name. I quite like your devious reasoning, but I'm not sure I'll actually use it. I trust that, with enough time, the right answer will come to me. Meanwhile: .... back in the days before internet, I used to translate letters for a
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The good news is that I'm finally getting my hernia fixed, the surgery is scheduled for Saturday. Beginning to get a bit nervous about it, as it's an operation under general anaesthetic, and since I'm a dinosaur like you they want to keep me in overnight, which is fine by me in case there are any
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Coincidence. I noted for the first time this morning, in a monastery garden above me where only cypresses tower, a cherry tree in full frilly blossom, virtually overnight, one that had never blossomed or done so, so discretely one never noticed it among the cypresses. While enjoying the prospect
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I would simply leave it as it is. It is common for publishing companies to have several imprints, and as far as I am aware, the normal practice is to state the imprint. I've always regarded an imprint as a publishing company in its own right, one that tends to be more specialised than its parent.
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Sorry for the late response here to your request for a Haaretz article directed a third person on a fourth person's talk page, but I feel you should know that if you are a chrome or firefox user and are ok with loading unpacked extensions then you should google "bypass paywalls github" and select
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Mah wee gurl refused to start work on your draft, complaining that there were 128 closing bracket pairs ("]]"), but only 126 opening ones. This type of error is usually quite easy to fix, since the superfluous bracket pairs will display quite openly on the visible page, and all one needs to do is
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It's not unique to GB. It's happened to Labour parties the world over as the middle class first thinks of them as vehicles of social reform, and then, is won over to the premise that this means being 'economically sensible' in the sense that that is defined by the rightwing, so one has to rid the
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At this point I'm beginning to worry that someone will, with good grounds, dob me in to the flicks for child molestation: due to my recently acquired life status, it looks like she's been struck by co-wid. Thanks pal. Few things are reliable in my world; you two, ungrudgingly patient and helpful,
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Nah, you didn't really mess anything up, you merely didn't notice the two forms of notes. Well, you did miss out a closing brace pair "}}", which has the potential of being difficult to find and fix (given there were 712 of the little buggers), but mah wee gurl spotted exactly where it was, so no
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Seem to have screwed up at least one thing at Khazars, to gather from the red ink at the bottom of the page. Any ideas? It seems to be connected to my last edit using efn and Miller as a source? Uh, fatigue, fatigue, no more however than what you have to put up with coping with my messes. Best in
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Shades of Kurt Gödel! It must be that the mathematically gifted are statistically prone to catheter problems. Gödel didn't trust surgery on his engrossed prostate and insisted that his doctor replace his urinary tract with a permanent catheter! Hope the upcoming operation goes as smoothly as the
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Ritual, we learn with age, is important, and finding out that she couldn't be dressed for the funeral, but was packed naked into a sack, that was sewn up, before the coffin was delivered, exacerbated the grief. Fortunately, her three children are ornaments to the superb quality of her motherhood.
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Jeezus, I missed that Neil, but the note,now read,was particularly poignant for me, not least because my sister-in-law, who suffered from dementia, and whom I could help care for these last few years because on her separation she bought the house next to us, was hit by Covid, and died last week.
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I think the British ferocity predates the classical school system - most of the murderers who committed genocides in Ireland, apart from that fairy Spenser, weren't literate. Classics did have an odd effect: fluency in Greek and Latin exposed youth to a vast panorama of what the humourless call
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Thanks, that's an excellent article, and confirms what I've already found out from other sources, but better written and composed. Funny thing: I thought "that's a good website, not heard of that before, I'll add it to my list" (the list that my ETVP script uses) – and then found it was already
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Jeezus mate, fuck. Sheer incompetence put you through the wringer. I myself was 1 hour from death several years ago on an operating table so it's not rhetorical to say I grasp the situation you found yourself in. This is a great relief. I've been wondering all day with some anxiety. Well, chum,
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did kindly respond, very promptly, to my request, so I now have a way of accessing Haaretz articles (thank you, Selfstudier). I'll take a look at "bypass paywalls github", as it sounds as though it may be useful for accessing other paywalled sites. No need to apologise for a late response – if
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great problem. You actually did quite well at fixing the no-target errors, there's now only one left. Unfortunately the mythical young lady had herself gone down with a couple of bugs, which took her a while to recover from. But she's better now, though the ailments took a while to diagnose. --
3294:. They replaced the mesh in a different position, stemmed the main bleeding, inserted a drain to get rid of excess blood, put me on I/V drugs to reduce bleeding. Plus a transfusion of red blood cells. So I'm now definitely on the mend, and internal bleeding has either ceased, or is negligible. 535:
As time passes, the way a lot of current events look to history will look much different to the way they are presented now by the news organisations. I imagine researchers examining diffs to to determine why Knowledge (XXG) articles were written the way they were. My guess is that the saga of
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obscenity, even though many editions had to be edited in a bowdlerized form to erase all of the 'gross' bits in Catullus, Juvenal, Horace et al., not to speak of the outrageously funny Aristophanes. So you had the paradoxical creation of a puritanical society training its sons on pornography!
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Only bother was the classical Greek ethnoym which was tossed out as being a modern Greek word when it ain't. The in text Chinese can stay, unless someone has fiddled round and wrecked the glosses I put in when I did the article. I'll check them one day. Enjoy stretching the pins. and thanks
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Were I to say at what age I lost mine, it would seem like vying. But bugger it. I never celebrate my birthday because she died to the hour two decades precisely after she bore me, and only had a moment to set her face with a smile for those who would find her. A remarkable generation. Best
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I use a script that I wrote myself (and am still developing, as a sort of retirement hobby). Perhaps you and others will be able to use it one day, but it won't be for a while yet (think years rather than weeks or months). See the very long pinned thread above (the 2nd pinned thread) for my
1892:. I really can't better Cobban's summary at that link. I'll just note that the British officers must have been influenced by Roman/classical education that they received at the elite, very expensive and very militarized public schools they were brought up in. Heart(s) of Darkness, indeed. 752:, who was General Secretary of the Labour Party while this sabotage was going on. He gave himself the title of "Baron McNicol of West Kilbride" when Corbyn nominated him to the House of Lords. I went to the same primary school – in the very same Victorian school building that produced a 4597:
But there is one advantage to all these catheter problems, and that is that they're going to be moving me up the priority list for the big op (as they should do). That's what I was told by the doc I saw this morning at A&E, when I went to see them about my latest catheter problems.
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I've just tried it, and it seems to work OK for me, allowing for the quirk you get while section-editing in Preview mode, that the efns are superscripted a,b,c,... but are displayed in the list as 1,2,3,.. I'll run my ETVP script in a moment to see if that makes a difference for you.
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I've screwed up massively because a mass of notes have disappeared from the visible page as I muddle harvid/harvnb/sfn/efn. I'm too exhausted to see to it myself. Perhaps the simplest solution is to just revert the text to what it was before the damage I inflicted took place. Sorry
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I'll try to flick a shufti at the Versailles page, but can't guarantee much at the mo' given some fine weather demanding delightfully heavy garden toils, and that springy jilt to the mind incipient spring always gives, so that one turns one's thoughts to serious offwiki projects.
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are now deprecated; instead you should use the appropriate choice(s) from the numerous access-control parameters, as described in the cite template documentation. They give you much better control over which items are restricted, and the precise level of access. See, for example,
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the family’s safety was under constant threat to the point when an embassy security guard confessed he had been told to steal one of the baby’s nappies so that a CIA-contracted company could analyse its DNA. There has been a stream of unpublicised threats against Stella and her
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tears. No need to apologise about your "negligence", you're a great asset to have in helping me develop my script, even if unwittingly. And it's a pleasure to help you develop your articles quickly without your having to use up valuable time worrying about technical niceties. --
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I read a lot of novels and poetry, but, in correspondence the other day, I suggested that the creativity of reality far outstripped our imagination, making art, let alone the exercise of rationality, pointless or perhaps just a hobby for a baker's dozen of oddballs in every
1687:. In both cases you can only edit them once, wherever they happen to be defined. If you don't know where they're defined, you can either edit the whole page and do a ctrl+F search, or just follow the backlinks in the "Notes" section. It's also possible to define them in the 1660:
I use Firefox as well, tried it in Chrome, same. If I edit whole page, same, I can see all the other efn and edit them no problem. I can see them on the article page, the pop up works, everything works, I just can't see or edit those few efn's in edit mode for some reason:(
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Someone added a bunch of stuff a while back in Chinese, which made it hard to run my script on it. Can't remember now what I did, but it was something like remove the stuff I can't read, run the script, put it back in again. Might help if you were able to clean it up a
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But I am writing re the news, on Once's page, that you're up for another bout of surgery. Best wishes, as before, for that, and auguries that you are back on your feet soon. Keep us posted, and I'll be thinking especially of you throughout tomorrow. Best wishes mate.
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It's a nice sunny day today, but today is the anniversary of my mother's death. A long and painful death from cancer. I won't say what age she would have been today, except that it is well over 100. She loved me, and that's all that matters. Thank you, Mother.
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of the catheter. They're not supposed to do that either. I'll spare you the details, except that each time it happens, I face a long and expensive emergency trip to the A&E. At least I can afford it without any problems, evil capitalist bastard that I am!
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expedient of opening a "private" window, or just using a different browser where cookies haven't been set. I therefore propose restoring marking Haaretz access as "subscription"; I don't think that Haaretz's making it easy to bypass is a reason not to do so.
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Now I suppose there's room for legitimate disagreement within any political party over policy, but stealing their office equipment, and trashing what's left? And then doing everything possible to obstruct their work? When they're paid to do the opposite?
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Crap. That never even occurred to me. I suppose because it is early on in the page, and I don't usually see efn used more than once in an article, I just assumed....duh, never assume. Thank ye. I think I might still reorder them tho so that it's first
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do any exercise for a week, but it took longer than that before I was able to return to the gym. But there are some differences from last time: (a) I have more confidence in this surgeon than the one who did it last time; (b) this time they're using
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Well, #2 still gives you the link to the other wp, but anyone who doesn't like redlinks probably won't like it. Neither solution is perfect, plus there's always the option of not linking at all. I just choose whichever feels best to me at the time.
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I've always taken uncle/great uncle/godfather duties very seriously, and so I'll have to wring the grey smatter over the next few months or years to make a list of possible suggestions for her rite de passage into the wider internet. Best to you
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about Iraq, 2007-8: "There were teams of U.S. intelligence officers who were trying to get as many fingerprints, DNA samples and so forth of anyone in Baghdad as they could. The analysts would be able to create link analysis charts from
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Evenin', y'auld rascal! Don't worry, I almost died, but I'm still here. Current state of brain function remains sub-optimal though. Those anaesthetics really mess up one's mind. Got home yesterday, but didn't feel able to write anything
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So it's quite embarrassing to have this connection with McNicol, as I could hardly disapprove more strongly of what he did. As a result of his well-rewarded treachery we now have the worst government in this country since the end of the
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and clicking the button labelled "Contest this speedy deletion". This will give you the opportunity to explain why you believe the page should not be deleted. Please do not remove the speedy deletion tag from the page yourself.
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and would sometimes have to go down to the library to check. The name Bosco and the Salesians immediately rang a bell, but it took me a while to remember where I had encountered it before.Bosco's article shows a statue of him in
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Hi, when I open up the Names section of Palestinian enclaves, I can't edit the efn notes in this part, they are just not displaying. it's fine everywhere else including elsewhere in the section. Any ideas? Shows like this:
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group of Quakers who supported political prisoners in oppressive regimes. The prisoners were referred to the group by Amnesty, who wouldn't campaign for prisoners who had used violence. It might look odd for Quakers (who
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Ah, not quite. Makes no difference on a talk page (such as this page), but in mainspace omitting the colon has the effect of changing the interwiki link under "Languages" in the side bar on the left, i.e., linking
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article, there is a much more closely spaced set of edits. Just thought it could possibly be useful to point that out. I have wondered, in any case, how well the SPI investigators can deal with geo-spoofing.
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article, and let me know what I could fix within the citations? I understand that you might be quite busy, therefore I understand if this peer-review is not possible, but it would be greatly appreciated.
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Good evening, young man. Yeah, that was a bit tricky. I'm not sure what language çȘćŽ„ćŻè–©éƒš is, so I didn't attempt to fix it, but I'm sure you can follow one of the models I used for the preceding languages.
4324:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 3445:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 656:
Proof again, if it were needed, that we live in an Orwellian world. Repulsive, esp. the obsessive use of anti-Semitism claims to oust people you dislike and stack the void with lipserving stooges.
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Anothe point re catheters. They're bad enough when they work as intended. But I've had a catheter fall out 3 times. They're not supposed to do that. The current one is leaking urine round the
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Not unexpected, but worth a try (plus I would be running it sooner or later anyway). I'm mostly using Firefox, BTW. Does it work OK if you edit the whole page, instead of just the section? --
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at the end of 2019 it was noted that geolocation put the operation of the accounts in question at some distance from each other, though the edits were spaced well apart in time. In the
3242:: I've just had a phone call from the hospital. For some reason, the surgeon is unable to operate tomorrow, so it's been put back to Sunday, and I'll still be around here till then. -- 2086:
Worth doing anyway, I think, so not a waste of time, merely delayed my walk a few minutes. Very pleasant day for a walk, but didn't get to see any of the beautiful deer in the forest.
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Thanks pal, and give a virtual bunch of roses to the little sheila. I don't presume to understand what you wrote, but since I can now see the problems in red, I don't really need to:)
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Wow, there's a coincidence, was reading that very article before I clicked on Knowledge (XXG) and saw your message. Might reply later, as I'm about to go out to do some shopping. --
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Don't worry about anaesthetics. Reading Knowledge (XXG) I/P articles tends to have a longterm anaesthetic effect as collateral damage, but one learns to live with it! Best wishes
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But those are the least of my medical problems, and I still have at least one more op to come (probably more, but it will depend on test results). Don't worry, it's not cancer.
1901:? There are some poor sections there on both Japan and Italy, which could benefit from the attention of someone more knowledgeable than I on those two countries. Many thanks. -- 1870:
On Nawi, I saw that the article had been routinely updated following his death (changes of tense, cats, etc) but no-one had bothered to provide any cite for his death. So I did.
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But this trick could be criticised as misleading readers into thinking that there is an article on en:wp, when there isn't. To solve this problem, you have the choice of the
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would be in his best interest. Within maybe 20 minutes, JSOC could launch a second raid targeting the uncle of Abu So-and-So." Fishing-expeditions indeed, Cheers,
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motivation in writing it. That thread also gives a part-description of what it does. I once called the script my "little baby", but she is now rapidly growing up.
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It seems that it takes about 3 days for the effects of the anaesthetic to wear off (made it almost impossible to type in my password correctly on first attempt).
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sight, massive white blossom on a tree the height of a 5-storey building. Sadly it will only last about a week or so, but it lifts the spirits to see it. --
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messed up the ARIJ sources though I didn't touch them. Compare pre and post page versions. Any suggestions (other than some persuasive Latinate advice eg
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happy girl, as she loves deleting duplicates, and everything is now neat and clean. BTW, not often I get to see the use of the marked vocative case... --
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Unlike the first choice, it will display correctly as soon as someone creates an article for it on en:wp, but this can be a mixed blessing, for example
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Thank you! I have various stuff stored on external harddrives, problem is that like lightbulbs, they die. Problem generally solved, see second half of
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Hi. I don't really have any advise to bestow because I no longer possess a firm recollection of the matter. Sorry I couldn't be of more help. Regards,
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I've lost count of the number of ops I've had since the beginning of October (about 6, I think, but I'll need to check my medical papers to be sure).
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OK, I've put in a quick fix for now. Will get the above-mentioned young lady to fix it properly later, once you've finished going through the page. --
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So that's the kidney stones dealt with at last. Ditto the hernia (except the gruesome after-effects of the op took several weeks to clear up).
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surgery instead of the crude, old-fashioned method; but (c) the hernia is about 4 times bigger because of the COVID delay. So we shall see. --
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Just a quick hello. I seem to remember you may not be quite finished with the various medical procedures, and wanted to wish you well.
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Perhaps I'm assuming you know the obvious? Named efns work just like named refs (which is what they are under the lid). Compare
4359: 3480: 2418:. What still bugs me is some sort of good how/why guidance on this type of referencing for newer editors. You won't find it at 2352: 1451: 4333: 3454: 4671:
Thanks, very much appreciated. I still don't know when my next operation is going to be. I suppose it could be said that the
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You can make that work but it's extra tricky in this case {{ill|Carla Rossi (philologist)|it|Carla Rossi|lt=Carla Rossi}} →
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It's a nice sunny day, so I'm going out for a long walk now, combined with some shopping. See you later, enjoy the Khazars!
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few days of my close cousin's death, and on the day of his funeral and I didn't waste much time on the net at the time.
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This T.M.C.ASSER PRESS imprint is published by the registered company Springer-Verlag GmbH, DE partof Springer Nature.
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Gramps screws up again and is putting out an advert requesting the services of any Sad Sack with a decent code-mop
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The sabotage by senior Labour Party officials against Jeremy Corbyn during his leadership was bad enough. See the
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Hey NSH001. Thank you very very much. I noted both the points you indicated, and 'll take care of it next time. --
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to the foreign target, not just the wikilink. You need to put a colon before the xx: at the start, like so
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But could you get that winsome littlesSheila of yours to swing her bot and romp through the FA candidate
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No, I won't, but I do intend eventually to set up some documentation for ETVP, as noted in my recent
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Nevertheless, notable Israelis and Americans have used the word to describe the enclaves including
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potatoes, carrot ingredients retained their savour) I came up with one possible monicker, i.e.
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to link to an author from a cite template. Nice and easy, but don't forget the first colon. --
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leads you to the wrong Carla Rossi. In this case, the first choice is your only alternative!
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is her honorary great-uncle, and I still have to think of a name for my (mythical) baby. --
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We should really be global and use interwiki just as we link within the English version.
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Labour winning the 2017 general election. Now this article (a must-read) appears:
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Making the world safe for democracy. We can all sleep easily in our beds tonight
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inside a citation template. The reason is set out by our useful friend Trappist
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No problem. I took a 20 minute nap, which I often do to solve puzzles like this.
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Thanks for the note. Astonishing that anyone would even consider deleting it! --
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If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
3020: 2793: 2512: 1467: 720:"I saw from the inside how Labour staff worked to prevent a Labour government" 681: 325: 2532: 1406:
Also, see the the CS1/2 cite template documentation for the correct usage of
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As it happens, I'm currently reading (amongst others) Sven Lindqvist's book
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there. (Hmmm, I must be getting old.) You might like to watch Scott Ritter
134:
Hello. Thanks for your help on Manilal Dwivedi. Could you do the same for
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That's what you taught me - a lesson learnt and forgotten, and retrieved.
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describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
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describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
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in my sandbox which redlinks Kimelman as some problem at 'position 37'?
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are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
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are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
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Expecting to see you hale and hearty in short order, cruzar los dedos:)
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just forgotten the template you provided me with (which used to work)?
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regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. Thank you.
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all there's google translate or something isn't there. Thanks again.
2181: 1960: 1772: 1271: 979: 3167:, for your thought and kindness. As always, very much appreciated. -- 2279:
If you think this page should not be deleted for this reason you may
1387:
I put Springer, Levivich changed it to Asser, so I put via Springer.
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Oh, and while you're here, could I prevail on you to take a look at
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templates on this page, but the references will not show without a
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Hum, no luck, I will try in another browser and see if that helps.
760:) as McNicol did a generation later. Although he uses the handle " 330: 4486:, your kindness and thoughtfulness are appreciated, as always. -- 911:
ctrl-F to find them. In doing so, I noticed that you had misused
4561: 4349:. If you no longer wish to receive these messages, you may add 3470:. If you no longer wish to receive these messages, you may add 2634:, as I was taught as a schoolboy, in my first term of German. -- 2461: 4552:
Well, the next operation is the final stage in dealing with my
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If you wish to participate in the 2022 election, please review
4307:
is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 12 December 2022. All
3460:
If you wish to participate in the 2021 election, please review
863:
to the long thread above. I've already made a start on this at
707:], from which it is clear that they worked very hard indeed to 297:
is intended as the feminine of the caressive diminutive suffix-
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is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 6 December 2021. All
619:(not surprisingly, the "mainstream" media aren't reporting it) 521:
to a version of the original SPI with some additional info. --
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Knowledge (XXG):Articles for deletion/List of peace activists
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Oh, the Americans are quite "into" the latest science; read
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Thanks, N and an affectionate pat for the systemizing sylph.
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may be of interest you as a major contributor to the page.
1093:, your thought and care is always very much appreciated. -- 680:
Excellent 39-minute video of interview with Jane Heybroek
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On-wiki Knowledge (XXG) Library notification rolling out
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under stress weighing on one's mind. Best wishes, Neil.
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I must confess I have a certain tenuous connection with
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is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
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is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
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Notice of neutral point of view noticeboard discussion
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Extrahere digitum e podice tibi necesse est, Nishidane
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Oops, I take back that bit about the mainstream media
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Hello, Nishidani recommended I ask you. Refs like at
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Blog post published detailing technical improvements
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indicating that it is currently empty, and is not a
1865:, hope you're keeping well, sorry about your cousin. 4459: 3139: 2829:, for your care and thought, always appreciated. -- 2374: 1715:
template. The underlying mechanism is identical. --
1065: 841: 825: 756:– in West Kilbride, and the same secondary school ( 578:(For the record, I contributed to her fundraiser)-- 2841:– PS I think you meant "pictures", not "pictured"? 1531: 1529: 625:comes from her tweet introducing the statement. -- 4558:Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate (HoLEP) 3510:Knowledge (XXG):Neutral point of view/Noticeboard 2377:thread above, where the ETVP script is mentioned. 705:leaked March 2020 Labour Party Report (851 pages) 226:BDW, how do you do this ? Can I do it myself ? -- 142:? I want to nominate the later for GA. Thanks. -- 4433:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 4391: 4280:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 4233: 4210:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 4160: 4137:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 4078: 4055:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3991: 3968:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3914: 3879:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3825: 3789:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3752: 3717:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3680: 3600:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3563: 3401:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3361: 3113:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 3073: 2913:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 2873: 2420:User:Nick Moyes/Easier Referencing for Beginners 2227:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 2190: 2009:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 1969: 1824:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 1781: 1320:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 1280: 1039:on behalf of The Knowledge (XXG) Library team -- 988: 4556:. It looks like it's going to be one of these: 4413:Spotlight: Promoting Nigerian Books and Authors 3891: 3802: 3729: 3657: 3540: 3338: 3090:New collections available in English and German 3050: 2850: 2167: 1946: 1758: 1257: 965: 3580:Knowledge (XXG) Library notifications deployed 2681:– also worth noting that you should never use 2274:section C1 of the criteria for speedy deletion 293:of Dante's incipit, the zone where man errs. - 3301:Well, that's probably enough info for now. -- 2025:. Cheers, pal. Hope it's not too much bovver 8: 4445: 3125: 2810:, with music full of hope and reformation -- 2629: 2462:https://fr.wikipedia.org/En_attendant_Nadeau 1701:, just like you can do for named refs using 1559:sfn error: no target: CITEREFGorenberg2006 ( 1051: 1627:(bit to get rid of ref errors on this page) 371:No problem, thanks anyway for the reply. -- 101:by any chance in the next week or so? Best 4709:by Professor Michael Brenner interesting. 4451: 4444: 3412: 3131: 3124: 2792: 2788: 1518:sfn error: no target: CITEREFHaaretz2004 ( 1213:Hello! I am currently editing an article, 1057: 1050: 1983:New partnerships: PNAS, De Gruyter, Nomos 1578:sfn error: no target: CITEREFSlater2001 ( 1554: 2732:Ah, you're right, I hadn't noticed that 2476:https://fr.wikipedia.org/Marc_Goldschmit 2469:https://fr.wikipedia.org/Daniel_Bougnoux 1597:sfn error: no target: CITEREFShany2019 ( 860: 836:. My first impression is that you have " 4730:those controlling them certainly aren't 3851:Information Processing Society of Japan 1540:sfn error: no target: CITEREFLevy2020 ( 1510: 1503: 2761:ILL is an aquired taste, no question. 1698: 1573: 1407: 1355:anyone's slow around here, it's me! -- 195: 191: 44:Do not edit the contents of this page. 4035:Spotlight: Collections indexed in EDS 4024:Collections moved to Library Bundle: 3948:Feedback requested on this newsletter 3856:Feedback requested on this newsletter 3182: 1592: 1019:AfLIA hires a Wikipedian-in-Residence 159:- OK, done. Note that templates like 7: 4304:2022 Arbitration Committee elections 3426:2021 Arbitration Committee elections 3087:Library design improvements deployed 2887:Library design improvements continue 2455:https://it.wikipedia.org/Carla_Rossi 1535: 1237:Replied on KatKucing's talk page. -- 922: 768:, which lies about half-way between 540:will crop up in in their reports. 4754: 4322:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 4288:ArbCom 2022 Elections voter message 4088:Issue 54, November – December 2022 4001:Issue 53, September – October 2022 3571:Issue 48, November – December 2021 3508:There is currently a discussion at 3443:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 3409:ArbCom 2021 Elections voter message 3369:Issue 47, September – October 2021 2631:Wer die Wahl hat, hat auch die Qual 2483:https://de.wikipedia.org/Erik_Reger 2391:So the answer is: watch this space! 1795:New EBSCO collections now available 1789:Issue 42, November – December 2020 1288:Issue 41, September – October 2020 198:mixed up. Good luck with the GA! -- 4379: 4221: 4190:Spotlight: EDS SmartText Searching 4170:Issue 55, January – February 2023 4148: 4066: 3979: 3890: 3801: 3728: 3688:Issue 49, January – February 2022 3656: 3539: 3381:New My Library design improvements 3337: 3049: 2849: 2166: 1977:Issue 42, January – February 2021 1945: 1757: 1256: 964: 24: 392:this dour covid times, as always 4646: 4293: 4032:New feature: Outage notification 3931:SpringerLink and Springer Nature 3928:New instant-access collections: 3893: 3804: 3731: 3659: 3542: 3503: 3416: 3340: 3052: 2852: 2595:(=Inter-language link) template: 2576:, as you did in the above list). 2375:"Citation and referencing style" 2169: 1948: 1760: 1681:text of citation...</ref: --> 1333:your browser of choice. Cheers, 1259: 967: 923: 842:§ Citation and referencing style 826:§ Citation and referencing style 614:Well you can read her statement 29: 4343:and submit your choices on the 3464:and submit your choices on the 2697:| author-link = :it:Carla Rossi 2353:Shakespeare authorship question 2021:Hi Neil. See my latest mess on 4760:<ref group=lower-alpha: --> 4496:07:30, 29 September 2022 (UTC) 4478:06:34, 29 September 2022 (UTC) 4257:Library access tips and tricks 3970:12:21, 30 September 2022 (UTC) 3202:16:24, 28 September 2021 (UTC) 3177:11:47, 29 September 2021 (UTC) 3158:07:41, 29 September 2021 (UTC) 3115:11:15, 22 September 2021 (UTC) 2605:{{ILL|En attendant Nadeau|fr}} 1804:Libraries love Wikimedia, too! 1504: 1350:Thanks for that, Nab. In fact 1158:21:29, 21 September 2020 (UTC) 1143:15:31, 21 September 2020 (UTC) 1127:11:36, 21 September 2020 (UTC) 1103:07:24, 29 September 2020 (UTC) 1084:06:18, 29 September 2020 (UTC) 1041:10:14, 10 September 2020 (UTC) 136:User:Gazal world/Fasana-e-Azad 1: 4768:{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} 4623:11:40, 16 February 2022 (UTC) 4608:12:32, 10 February 2022 (UTC) 4593:04:24, 10 February 2022 (UTC) 4368:00:35, 29 November 2022 (UTC) 4260:Spotlight: EveryBookItsReader 4243:Issue 56, March – April 2023 4117:Spotlight: EDS Refine Results 4057:11:19, 17 November 2022 (UTC) 3922:Issue 52, July – August 2022 3760:Issue 50, March – April 2022 3623:12:52, 28 November 2021 (UTC) 3528:19:25, 21 December 2021 (UTC) 3489:00:16, 23 November 2021 (UTC) 3403:16:58, 10 November 2021 (UTC) 3081:Issue 46, July – August 2021 2198:Issue 43, March – April 2021 1934:13:27, 11 February 2021 (UTC) 1911:10:43, 11 February 2021 (UTC) 1856:14:24, 10 February 2021 (UTC) 1365:22:14, 11 December 2020 (UTC) 1344:15:41, 11 December 2020 (UTC) 1322:10:48, 18 November 2020 (UTC) 1247:10:04, 17 November 2020 (UTC) 1232:02:51, 17 November 2020 (UTC) 996:Issue 40, July – August 2020 561:Some good news, for a change. 517:P.S. For reference, here's a 4574:21:20, 9 February 2022 (UTC) 4548:18:10, 9 February 2022 (UTC) 4530:10:22, 9 February 2022 (UTC) 4501:In case anyone's worried ... 4376:Books & Bytes – Issue 57 4218:Books & Bytes – Issue 56 4145:Books & Bytes – Issue 55 4139:14:14, 23 January 2023 (UTC) 4103:University of Michigan Press 4063:Books & Bytes – Issue 54 3976:Books & Bytes – Issue 53 3887:Books & Bytes – Issue 52 3798:Books & Bytes – Issue 51 3725:Books & Bytes – Issue 50 3653:Books & Bytes – Issue 49 3645:10:39, 5 February 2022 (UTC) 3602:15:13, 2 February 2022 (UTC) 3536:Books & Bytes – Issue 48 3334:Books & Bytes – Issue 47 3046:Books & Bytes – Issue 46 2846:Books & Bytes – Issue 45 2416:User_talk:Xover#Help_me_out? 2163:Books & Bytes – Issue 43 1942:Books & Bytes – Issue 42 1883:"Exterminate all the Brutes" 1826:14:00, 25 January 2021 (UTC) 1801:Library Card input requested 1754:Books & Bytes - Issue 42 1740:15:14, 18 January 2021 (UTC) 1725:14:18, 18 January 2021 (UTC) 1671:13:01, 18 January 2021 (UTC) 1656:07:31, 18 January 2021 (UTC) 1642:07:15, 18 January 2021 (UTC) 1621:22:54, 17 January 2021 (UTC) 1498:22:29, 17 January 2021 (UTC) 1420:13:06, 17 January 2021 (UTC) 1400:10:37, 17 January 2021 (UTC) 1253:Books & Bytes – Issue 41 961:Books & Bytes – Issue 40 4500: 4393:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 4235:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 4162:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 4080:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3993:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3899:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3848:University of Chicago Press 3810:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3737:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3665:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3548:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3346:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3326:21:18, 7 October 2021 (UTC) 3311:19:26, 7 October 2021 (UTC) 3276:10:15, 6 October 2021 (UTC) 3252:16:14, 1 October 2021 (UTC) 3235:06:02, 1 October 2021 (UTC) 3216:00:30, 1 October 2021 (UTC) 3183:How'ya doen there, ol' son? 3058:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 3040:22:36, 15 August 2021 (UTC) 3014:15:34, 13 August 2021 (UTC) 2858:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 2808:missing pictured on my talk 2254:Category:Basque triathletes 2240:Category:Basque triathletes 2175:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 1954:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 1766:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 1265:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 1197:15:54, 6 October 2020 (UTC) 1183:15:15, 6 October 2020 (UTC) 973:The Knowledge (XXG) Library 953:20:44, 15 August 2020 (UTC) 939:16:25, 15 August 2020 (UTC) 905:12:43, 15 August 2020 (UTC) 820:Suggestion: Write an essay? 718:Ryle, Joe (7 August 2020). 4795: 4742:14:12, 12 March 2022 (UTC) 4719:06:41, 12 March 2022 (UTC) 4701:14:07, 10 March 2022 (UTC) 4686:00:39, 10 March 2022 (UTC) 4663:00:04, 10 March 2022 (UTC) 4431:MediaWiki message delivery 4401:Issue 57, May – June 2023 4360:MediaWiki message delivery 4278:MediaWiki message delivery 4212:12:45, 16 March 2023 (UTC) 4208:MediaWiki message delivery 4135:MediaWiki message delivery 4053:MediaWiki message delivery 3966:MediaWiki message delivery 3881:16:45, 1 August 2022 (UTC) 3877:MediaWiki message delivery 3833:Issue 51, May – June 2022 3787:MediaWiki message delivery 3769:1Lib1Ref May 2022 underway 3766:New library partner - SPIE 3719:10:06, 25 March 2022 (UTC) 3715:MediaWiki message delivery 3598:MediaWiki message delivery 3481:MediaWiki message delivery 3399:MediaWiki message delivery 3111:MediaWiki message delivery 2977:16:49, 3 August 2021 (UTC) 2963:22:59, 2 August 2021 (UTC) 2943:17:29, 2 August 2021 (UTC) 2911:MediaWiki message delivery 2881:Issue 45, May – June 2021 2743:used this construction at 2384:Houston, we have a problem 2225:MediaWiki message delivery 2149:10:00, 22 April 2021 (UTC) 2134:08:08, 22 April 2021 (UTC) 2119:20:34, 21 April 2021 (UTC) 2081:18:08, 21 April 2021 (UTC) 2066:15:54, 21 April 2021 (UTC) 2035:14:06, 21 April 2021 (UTC) 2011:11:27, 22 March 2021 (UTC) 2007:MediaWiki message delivery 1843:lignum..adhaerente spongia 1822:MediaWiki message delivery 1318:MediaWiki message delivery 1037:MediaWiki message delivery 881:22:10, 9 August 2020 (UTC) 854:15:31, 9 August 2020 (UTC) 812:16:09, 9 August 2020 (UTC) 794:20:36, 7 August 2020 (UTC) 764:", he actually comes from 694:17:41, 3 August 2020 (UTC) 4726:here (approx 22min video) 4450: 4435:11:22, 18 July 2023 (UTC) 4410:Favorite collections tips 4097:British Newspaper Archive 3130: 2915:11:04, 30 July 2021 (UTC) 2820:18:57, 29 June 2021 (UTC) 2802:... for what you said on 2791: 2771:14:53, 27 June 2021 (UTC) 2757:13:51, 27 June 2021 (UTC) 2728:12:08, 27 June 2021 (UTC) 2709:14:25, 27 June 2021 (UTC) 2674:23:16, 24 June 2021 (UTC) 2659:20:32, 24 June 2021 (UTC) 2644:16:48, 24 June 2021 (UTC) 2550:14:36, 24 June 2021 (UTC) 2502:13:41, 24 June 2021 (UTC) 2436:11:22, 22 June 2021 (UTC) 2406:11:02, 22 June 2021 (UTC) 2341:06:26, 22 June 2021 (UTC) 2326:12:50, 21 June 2021 (UTC) 2270:Categories for discussion 2252:A tag has been placed on 1328:paywalls and other things 1056: 1016:#1Lib1Ref May 2020 report 865:User:NSH001/ETVP/examples 666:21:28, 29 July 2020 (UTC) 652:19:48, 29 July 2020 (UTC) 635:18:31, 29 July 2020 (UTC) 609:17:31, 29 July 2020 (UTC) 588:13:57, 29 July 2020 (UTC) 573:13:57, 29 July 2020 (UTC) 548:21:08, 21 July 2020 (UTC) 531:14:00, 23 July 2020 (UTC) 515:16:12, 21 July 2020 (UTC) 499:14:36, 21 July 2020 (UTC) 462:07:12, 13 July 2020 (UTC) 447:02:44, 13 July 2020 (UTC) 432:16:53, 12 July 2020 (UTC) 417:13:11, 12 July 2020 (UTC) 402:12:43, 12 July 2020 (UTC) 381:20:24, 28 June 2020 (UTC) 366:20:15, 28 June 2020 (UTC) 347:11:08, 22 June 2020 (UTC) 311:19:15, 21 June 2020 (UTC) 280:20:01, 17 June 2020 (UTC) 264:18:18, 17 June 2020 (UTC) 236:17:21, 17 June 2020 (UTC) 222:16:59, 17 June 2020 (UTC) 208:15:38, 17 June 2020 (UTC) 152:11:40, 17 June 2020 (UTC) 130:13:29, 15 June 2020 (UTC) 111:13:28, 15 June 2020 (UTC) 4420:Read the full newsletter 4357:to your user talk page. 4282:10:03, 24 May 2023 (UTC) 4267:Read the full newsletter 4197:Read the full newsletter 4124:Read the full newsletter 4042:Read the full newsletter 3955:Read the full newsletter 3866:Read the full newsletter 3791:12:52, 1 June 2022 (UTC) 3776:Read the full newsletter 3704:Read the full newsletter 3587:Read the full newsletter 3478:to your user talk page. 3388:Read the full newsletter 3100:Read the full newsletter 2925:Seems my latest edit at 2900:Read the full newsletter 2839:07:43, 1 July 2021 (UTC) 2695:. But you can still use 2460:fr|En attendant Nadeau ( 2365:18:39, 31 May 2021 (UTC) 2300:14:47, 7 June 2021 (UTC) 2266:featured topics category 2229:11:11, 10 May 2021 (UTC) 2214:Read the full newsletter 2204:New Library Card designs 1996:Read the full newsletter 1811:Read the full newsletter 1307:Read the full newsletter 1294:New partnership: Taxmann 1026:Read the full newsletter 4407:Suggestion improvements 4187:1Lib1Ref January report 3694:New library collections 2307:List of peace activists 2258:disambiguation category 1890:drew my attention to it 1703:list-defined references 1685:<ref name=foo /: --> 1209:Request for Peer Review 869:dungheap citation style 595:I'm a great belief in 4386: 4228: 4155: 4073: 3986: 3909: 3845:Elsevier ScienceDirect 3820: 3747: 3675: 3558: 3356: 3093:Wikimania presentation 3068: 2997: 2868: 2630: 2622:{{ILL|Carla Rossi|it}} 2281:contest the nomination 2268:, under discussion at 2249: 2185: 1964: 1798:1Lib1Ref 2021 underway 1776: 1275: 983: 4639:Some baklava for you! 4385: 4318:Arbitration Committee 4301:Hello! Voting in the 4227: 4176:New bundle partners: 4154: 4109:Duke University Press 4072: 3985: 3908: 3839:New library partners 3819: 3746: 3674: 3557: 3439:Arbitration Committee 3423:Hello! Voting in the 3355: 3067: 2988: 2867: 2467:fr| Daniel Bougnoux ( 2248: 2184: 1963: 1775: 1680:<ref name=foo: --> 1390:What do you suggest? 1375:The source has this: 1274: 982: 164:Subscription required 42:of past discussions. 4441:Precious anniversary 4016:Corriere della Serra 3937:Taylor & Francis 3378:Search tool deployed 3121:Precious anniversary 2995:over at Counterpunch 2804:User talk:SlimVirgin 2607:, which displays as 2474:fr Marc Goldschmit ( 1899:Treaty of Versailles 1047:Precious anniversary 887:Where did I screw up 754:Nobel peace laureate 324:or "saints" such as 4447: 3127: 2609:En attendant Nadeau 2518:En attendant Nadeau 1053: 116:See the discussion 4774:template (see the 4387: 4334:arbitration policy 4229: 4156: 4074: 3987: 3910: 3821: 3748: 3676: 3559: 3455:arbitration policy 3357: 3069: 2869: 2763:GrĂ„bergs GrĂ„a SĂ„ng 2720:GrĂ„bergs GrĂ„a SĂ„ng 2428:GrĂ„bergs GrĂ„a SĂ„ng 2371:GrĂ„bergs GrĂ„a SĂ„ng 2357:GrĂ„bergs GrĂ„a SĂ„ng 2347:harvnb referencing 2250: 2186: 1965: 1777: 1276: 1219:Cannabis in Brunei 1215:Cannabis in Brunei 984: 597:qui audit, evincit 4668: 4667: 4466: 4465: 4437: 4397:Books & Bytes 4370: 4284: 4239:Books & Bytes 4214: 4166:Books & Bytes 4141: 4094:New collections: 4084:Books & Bytes 4059: 4007:New collections: 3997:Books & Bytes 3972: 3917:Books & Bytes 3883: 3859:1Lib1Ref May 2022 3828:Books & Bytes 3794: 3755:Books & Bytes 3721: 3683:Books & Bytes 3604: 3566:Books & Bytes 3518:Replied there. -- 3496: 3495: 3491: 3405: 3364:Books & Bytes 3298:done that sooner. 3146: 3145: 3117: 3076:Books & Bytes 2921:Screwing up again 2917: 2876:Books & Bytes 2800: 2799: 2444:Format probs agin 2424:Help:Introduction 2305:Deletion nom for 2285:visiting the page 2262:category redirect 2231: 2193:Books & Bytes 2013: 1972:Books & Bytes 1828: 1784:Books & Bytes 1628: 1460:Gershom Gorenberg 1346: 1324: 1283:Books & Bytes 1072: 1071: 1043: 1002:New partnerships 991:Books & Bytes 758:Ardrossan Academy 611: 590: 556:Qui audet vincit. 93:You might be busy 90: 89: 54: 53: 48:current talk page 4786: 4781: 4780: 4779: 4773: 4769: 4765: 4761: 4650: 4643: 4642: 4455: 4448: 4428: 4399: 4358: 4356: 4297: 4275: 4241: 4205: 4168: 4132: 4086: 4050: 3999: 3963: 3920: 3897: 3874: 3831: 3808: 3784: 3758: 3735: 3712: 3686: 3663: 3595: 3569: 3546: 3507: 3506: 3479: 3477: 3420: 3413: 3396: 3367: 3344: 3135: 3128: 3108: 3079: 3056: 2908: 2890:New partnerships 2879: 2856: 2796: 2789: 2741: 2735: 2698: 2690: 2684: 2633: 2623: 2606: 2594: 2588: 2575: 2568: 2453:it|Carla Rossi ( 2298: 2247: 2222: 2196: 2173: 2004: 1975: 1952: 1819: 1787: 1764: 1714: 1708: 1700: 1696: 1690: 1686: 1682: 1626: 1603: 1602: 1590: 1584: 1583: 1571: 1565: 1564: 1552: 1546: 1545: 1533: 1524: 1523: 1508: 1476:Meron Benvenisti 1409: 1339: 1334: 1315: 1286: 1263: 1163:Patrick Cockburn 1061: 1054: 1034: 994: 971: 928: 927: 926: 920: 914: 782:Second World War 740: 734: 732: 623:Qui audet vincit 594: 577: 546: 497: 197: 193: 189: 183: 178: 172: 168: 162: 81: 56: 55: 33: 32: 26: 18:User talk:NSH001 4794: 4793: 4789: 4788: 4787: 4785: 4784: 4783: 4771: 4767: 4763: 4759: 4757: 4755: 4705:You might find 4641: 4503: 4443: 4426: 4425: 4423: 4403: 4388: 4378: 4373: 4372: 4350: 4298: 4290: 4273: 4272: 4270: 4245: 4230: 4220: 4203: 4202: 4200: 4172: 4157: 4147: 4130: 4129: 4127: 4090: 4075: 4065: 4048: 4047: 4045: 4003: 3988: 3978: 3961: 3960: 3958: 3924: 3911: 3902: 3889: 3872: 3871: 3869: 3835: 3822: 3813: 3800: 3782: 3781: 3779: 3762: 3749: 3740: 3727: 3710: 3709: 3707: 3690: 3677: 3668: 3655: 3610: 3608:A sad day today 3593: 3592: 3590: 3573: 3560: 3551: 3538: 3504: 3501: 3471: 3411: 3394: 3393: 3391: 3371: 3358: 3349: 3336: 3185: 3123: 3106: 3105: 3103: 3083: 3070: 3061: 3048: 2987: 2923: 2906: 2905: 2903: 2893:1Lib1Ref update 2883: 2870: 2861: 2848: 2787: 2739: 2733: 2696: 2688: 2682: 2621: 2604: 2592: 2586: 2573: 2566: 2528:Marc Goldschmit 2523:Daniel Bougnoux 2481:de|Erik Reger ( 2446: 2382:Unfortunately, 2349: 2312:The discussion 2310: 2289: 2245: 2243: 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Index

User talk:NSH001
archive
current talk page
Archive 1
Archive 3
Archive 4
Archive 5
Archive 6
Manilal Dwivedi
Nishidani
talk
13:28, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
here
Nishidani
talk
13:29, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
User:Gazal world/Fasana-e-Azad
Siddhantasara
Gazal world
talk
11:40, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
Gazal world
Subscription required
Closed access
Cite book
NSH001
talk
15:38, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
Gazal world
talk

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