Knowledge

:Teahouse/Questions/Archive 112 - Knowledge

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375:
would give you my impressions -- and at least in my experience the feedback here is outstanding. Its why I keep volunteering time its so refreshing to see an online environment where people treat each other with respect as the default rather than hurling insult as seems to be the default in most places. Here is an article on Wikipedian's outlook on things. Its not an official article (also its a little off color so if you are easily offended ignore it please) but someone else linked me to it a while back and it really helped me understand how things work here and how to be a productive contributor:
1753:. This makes me wonder, how serious is the wikipedia review process? Who reviews the articles? Is it random and just one reviewer decides the outcome? In scientific journals, the reviewers would at least consult the authors with questions, clarifications and revisions prior to making a final decision. It is grossly frustrating and off putting to experience this kind of amateurish handle on my work. Therefore, I am assuming and hoping you would explain, that mine was not a typical reviewing experience at wikipedia? Thank you. 1926:
phone calls). I have posted messages in reply to Hamiltonstone but have had no further contribution from him and I notice from his own talk page that the last time he posted any comment (to anyone at all) was 11 April. I have specifically asked him to remove the tag on 25 May. There has still been no response. How can I get Hamiltonstone's attention? Alternatively, is it possible to get someone else to remove the tag.Purwthrub 06:31, 6 June 2013 (UTC)
35: 507: 767:
Tennessee; Matt in Irvine, California; and Jan in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma." Those are the real winners in this week's special Scott Sigler book giveaway, and they've each won a copy of his novel Earthcore, but the list also provides a great example of using semicolons in a list. Because each item in the list requires a comma to separate the city from the state, you have to use a semicolon to separate the items themselves.
1780:(e.g the mythbusters forum) so you can take some time to work on improving the article before resubmitting. It does seem that there is a misunderstanding in relation to the terms Mechanical amplifier and the one it redirects to and I am sure you can get your point across before re-submitting. Editors who are more experienced than I will be along soon to provide further insights. I hope I have been of some help. 861:. If an appositive is set off by commas then it is by definition non-restrictive, and if it is not set off by commas then it is restrictive. A part of what you quoted seems quite wrong to me: "it is not crucial to the meaning of the sentence". What is really meant here is that a parenthetical part of a sentence can be removed and for the sentence to remain grammatically correct. Let's take an example: 394:
I was able to retrieve it and change two sentences and it was reviewed and went live almost immediately. That really ticked me off, when they could have just flagged it and had me adjust. As far is the article you linked to, it just sort of proves the point. Such garbage is allowed to remain on Knowledge but lots of good commentary from individuals with first hand knowledge isn't allowed as a
4190:. If you drop the URL of the external site into it, you can then see that the text was present (unchanged) since November 29, 2010. If the offending text in the Knowledge article post-dated that, you would know 100% that it was a copyvio. It doesn't work so well in the other direction. To wit, since the Knowledge article's text long predates 2010, the Wayback Machine results can only be a mere 3654: 3347:
see on a CV, LinkedIn profile or company website, they really are't suitable for Knowledge. The language of the "Proponent..." section is very promotional (vague phrases like "widely recognized as the pioneer" or "refined the method" are exactly the sort of marketing-speak that we try to avoid here), and whilst a selection of awards
3273:
submission only include facts and those facts are supported by references which come from sources like government website, university website, Forbes article, bloomberg article, etc, although some of them include Chinese media (but recognized ones) sources. Is it because of the Chinese media sources that the submission got declined?
1314:. You cannot actually delete the account, as there needs to be some record of your contributions, because of Knowledge's licensing requirements. You can, if you wish, request to "vanish", which involves having your account renamed to a random string of characters and the password changed so it cannot be accessed anymore. 807:
of Wales' is a 'restrictive appsotive', where: "the second element limits or clarifies the foregoing one in some crucial way…In English, non-restrictive appositives are typically preceded or set off by commas, while restrictive appositives are not set off by commas." (these quotes are from the relevant wikipedia article).
701:. There are some editors there who are extremely knowledgeable about English usage. If consensus develops that you are correct and that this problem is widespread on Knowledge, then an appropriate addition to Knowledge's Manual of Style can be made. You can then cite the Manual of Style when making these corrections. 4200:
of the person who added the text to see if they have had problems with copyvios (you should treat the page as a presumptive copyvio, if such are found). Here, I was not able to determine the user had any major copyvios in the past. This is a hard one but sometimes using these methods it can be a breeze.--
4194:
that the Knowledge article might have been first, because the Wayback Machine does not always capture the earliest entry. Complicating matters more, we know from the article that he was inducted in 1998, and we have to wonder, then, when the entry went up, (possibly at that early date). Another thing
3983:
I have been reviewing submissions in the Articles for Creation category and one of the options is to send an invitation to the Teahouse. However, the messages says "I noticed..." and then does not sign the invitation. If the invitation was intended to come from the particular reviewer, shouldn't it
3346:
Hi Tsuitsui. No, your sources are (generally) okay (English sources are preferred, but Chinese ones are perfectly acceptable). The problem, I would say, stems from the last two sections ("Proponent of value investing" and "Industry recognition"); whilst these are the sort of thing one would expect to
3272:
Hello, I am new to the English Knowledge and was trying to create one article for this man called Cheah Cheng Hye. The article is reviewed and declined for "submission does not appear to be written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article"...I look at the content again and feel that the
3222:
I want to help a user to get his or her new WikiProject running (as I am relatively good at organizing and and tedious editing (page tagging and the like), so I thought it would be something I could help with, but all the WikiProjects I have found, are well established. Is there any way to find a new
2511:
Hello all. I posted (and Knowledge accepted) an entry I wrote about a retired figure in advertising. I wanted to post a photo of him that his former agency took for promotional reasons. The head of the agency's corporate communications department sent me an e-mail saying that it is fine to use the
1376:
If you want to make a "clean start", you just stop using this account, never use it again, and start using a new account. "Courtesy vanishing" is for users that never intend to use Knowledge again. Clean start just means "I'm going to use a new account and leave the old one behind." Here's how you
420:
Hi Aggie80! What "sounds like an essay" usually means is that an article is written more like what one would read in journalistic writing or some-such. Articles on Knowledge are meant to be dry and factual, it actually makes them sound a little boring sometimes, but that is a good way to keep things
393:
Well, I'm hoping that I do get some feedback. My first two articles were deleted with no commentary, help or assistance, just gone. One for 'lack of notoriety' which appears to be more subjective than objective. The other for "apparent copyright violation" which was based on one or two sentences.
3890:
I believe in the beginning of Knowledge you became an admin by registering since the tools had not been turned off for certain access levels, so I guess the question has to become, after the hierarchy was imposed, who became one in the shortest amount of time? I don't know the answer to that but the
3418:
Hi DamonWiki, and welcome to The Teahouse. I'm glad to see you are enthusiastic about getting started. It's very common for editors who own or are associated with a business to start by writing an article about it, but I'm actually going to recommend you avoid doing this. This is primarily because
2256:
There always used to be a pulldown in the editing text box to select different reference type inputs. When inputting references from URLs it was just a matter of filling in the boxes and it placed a cool smart cursor on the article page, with flyout description and link to the URL address. Where did
2124:
I am a new editor and my main purpose here is to post links to quality online resources created and maintained by UC Irvine Libraries in relevant articles. I quickly read through the help page on "user page" and it sounds any personal information posted there is in danger of being publicly cited and
1126:
exists in English, but it also exists in Russian. Although when go to English or Russian page under Languages they do not exist. All I’m trying to do is simply link them together. What I did is 1. Clicked on Edit page under languages. 2. Scrolled down and chose add. 3. Typed RU for Russian. 4. Under
823:
As a 'side note', IMO the MOS talk pages (especially relating to commas) are full of large amounts of hot air generated by people arguing 'irrelevant' points, such as the 'classification of a particular comma (serial, oxford, whatever)' in places where /any/ comma is ambiguous (and it should thus be
437:
Hi! Responses vary wildly but the bar on new articles can be quite high. The good news is that if the new article survives a few days, then you probably have traction and you can put out a request for peer review to get some real feedback. If an article is summarily deleted without a reason (usually
4222:
Fuhghettaboutit took the words right out of my mouth but I wanted to add a bit of encouragement - the whole Internet can take any Knowledge article and copy it, that's completely legal (and fairly common). All the time, editors looking for reliable citations end up finding an entire version of the
4199:
tool can be very hekpful in articles with large page histories to find the revision adding specific material. Unfortunately, again, the suspected copyvio text was in the page's first revision, already wikilinked and the like, so there's no easy determination. One more route: check the contributions
3251:
which has all kinds of links and whatnot to guide in the creation of a new wikiproject. I would be happy to offer any technical assistance I can. Hit me up on my talk page and we can discuss specifics. Creating a new wikiproject is just a matter of creating the first page with some basic info to
2024:
I'm not sure the issues identified on the article's Talk page have actually been resolved. There doesn't appear to be enough written about the other side of the controversy. I can not see consensus nor can i see any support from other editors that neutrality has been achieved. Make sure the dispute
1999:
There are also some outstanding issues that I have asked him to look at, too, with regard to the three images that have been inserted in the article on the basis of "Non-free use rationale". These have attracted robot notices which I believe have now been addressed. I would like to be re-assured of
1925:
I have been editing the article on Eddie Burrup. As I started working on it Hamiltonstone tagged the article with a NPOV on 4 April and posted some advice to me on 5 April 2013. Since then the article has been improved with the help of an experienced Knowledge contributor (advising me by email and
1715:
Your fix for your signature is on my talk page. As for your archival and header, how would you feel about moving the stuff you want to keep on a separate page and just transclude it? Also, I'm just about to head to class, but would be happy to create an archive access box for the top of your page
1142:
Hi AvoBoro, and welcome to the Teahouse. I had the same error you did at first, and it seemed like the page was being linked to from somewhere else (it was listed as "Item Q" followed by a bunch of numbers-- no idea what that means). Anyway, I just removed the link from that place since it didn't
806:
To address the other raised point, re "Charles, Prince of Wales", even if you ignore the fact that it's a /title/, a 'non-restrictive appositive' is where:"the second element parenthetically modifies the first without changing its scope and it is not crucial to the meaning of the sentence." 'Prince
2233:
I've added a great deal about my 'qualifications' if you will, with lots of links and information about what I've done. But at the same time, there is very little (one thing) that could be used to work its way back to me personally. I also find it a convenient place to put links to the pages I'm
2188:
Construct your user page the way you want, disclosing as little or as much about yourself as you feel comfortable with. I recommend openness to all editors within reason. Do not post the passwords to your retirement accounts, for example. But many editors have valid reasons for complete anonymity.
614:
Demiurge and 82.45.217.156, the quote's grammar is perfect British English. But it isn't British style. It wouldn't be written by a Briton for a British audience. As you allude to, this usage stems from Americans giving the name of the state when writing or talking about American towns and cities.
1748:
based on my teaching experience, expert knowledge and research skills at a world class university. Unfortunately, it has been declined by one single reviewer who didn't even try to understand the situation properly and rejected my time and effort with a click of a button. I have wrote my rebuttal
374:
Hi Aggie80, welcome to the teahouse! This is not an "official" answer as I'm just lurking and not an actual Tea House moderator. I stopped by to get some questions answered and now I keep coming back just because I've been learning misc. things that way. But I'm a new editor as well so thought I
1579:
Welcome back to the Teahouse, Miss Bono! First of all, I added some "nowiki" tags to the MiszaBot to make sure that there are no problems with our own archiving. Now, onto your question. You filled everything in correctly. When you paste that in, it's not visible on the talk page itself. It also
618:
To 82.45.217.156, you are of the opinion that setting off non-reatrictive appositives with commas looks more American than British. I assure you that this is most definitely part of every dialect of English. From what I've read, though, the commas are most often omitted by Americans when writing
766:
I don't want to confuse you, but there is one situation where you use semicolons with coordinating conjunctions, and that's when you are writing a list of items and commas just don't do the job of separating them all. Here's an example: "This week's book winners are Herbie in Milligan College,
2527:
Hello, Intimeagain. No, it almost certainly does not fulfil the requirements because 1) permission to use the photo on Knowledge is not enough: it must be licensed to allow any use, commercial or non-commercial; and 2) it may not sufficiently establish that the mail comes from the owner of the
1995:
that the article is now neutral and I have three people who concur. So, in accordance with your suggestion I will now proceed to remove the tag. However, I must say that I would still have liked Hamiltonstone to respond to my notices to him as he was the one who tagged the article in the first
960:....There are many people named Charles....specifying which one 'reduces the scope' of "Charles", so the appositive is restrictive, and does not need a 'following' comma. (I'm assuming we're talking about the 'type' of construction here, and not worrying about the 'preceding' comma). 619:
dates and the names of places, as in, "On June 10, 2004 people had been..." and, "West, Texas was the scene of..." Examples such as these can be found all over Knowledge. They are mistakes which are, sadly, now creeping into British English. I'll fetch the references you require. And
4195:
you can do is look for how the suspected copyvio text was added. Specifically, if it was added as a pure "text dump", that's a good indication, and if it was pieced together over time or in separate edits with tweaks, that's an even better indication of the opposite proposition. The
349:
I've finished drafting five articles! I'm rather excited to have gotten a good start on these biographies. I have no concerns with notoriety, I believe I have adequately documented their importance and contributions, though there might be some tweaking on reference formats needed.
3956:. The reference desks are usually good about addressing such questions, at least by pointing you to articles on Knowledge (and elsewhere on the Internet) that may explain things. If I'm not understanding your question, please feel free to elaborate here and we'll try again! :) -- 919:
An orthography is a standardized system for using a particular writing system (script) to write a particular language. It includes rules of spelling. Other elements of written language that are part of orthography include hyphenation, capitalization, word breaks, emphasis, and
4223:
article they are working on and do that "huh, chicken or egg" thing where it has to be researched which is source material and which is the scrape. Wayback is a great first line of defense. And this isn't as helpful, but you sort of develop a sense of these things over time.
704:
I should warn you that the MoS talk page can be a very hostile environment. Some of the participants there may not share your calm and your rationality. I think your case would be greatly strengthened if you were able to cite a style or grammar authority in your favor.
828:
is mentioned, as in most cases people seem to base their idea of 'regional usage' on what they see in newspapers, which is IMO totally wrong....(newspapers worry more about 'speed' than being 'correct', and follow different rules than 'real' books like encyclopedias).
1121:
Hi, I did make a search and read through some help material but unfortunately it didn’t work for me. What I’m trying to do is simple link articles that already exist between each other. They are identical documents but in different languages. For instance the article
2172:. If you make people aware that your goal is to find places that material from UC Irvine Libraries fits in Knowledge, you will eventually start getting requests from others to help including that material. You don't have to reveal who you are to accomplish that.— 2167:
Opinions on including personal information vary: I keep my identity quite public, while others prefer an extremely paranoid level of cloaking. That's a personal choice. If you are an editor with a mission, though, it's usually best to disclose what that mission
1490:
Hi, I created a page in my sandbox, and, after hundreds of reviews and corrections, I am ready to move it to the Knowledge production. I can't find a clear step-by-step on how-to do that. Can anyone help? Thank you much! - agringaus 16:08, 6 June 2013 (UTC)
3891:
amount of experience required to pass RfA has consistently climbed and in the early days, even after the levels were imposed, there was a much less formal process, so you couldn't even search by looking at the earliest RfA's because RfA didn't exist. The
3402:
I am new to Knowledge and I wanted to create an official page for my company that has not been created yet. Is it best to get the page online with only the basic info to start(as a placeholder), or should I take more time and create a foundation before I
2300:
Thanks for your response. However I have no "cite" anywhere around the editing box. I see menus "B I Sig&Time Link EmbFile Reference Advanced SpecChars Help". The reference menu only gives a single string input box which it delimits with the <ref:
482:
Are editors allowed to post a link to their person website in a userpage? When I was here before it was not explicitly disallowed, but I'm VERY reluctant to do this without someone saying it's ok. I don't want to get in trouble for spamming, as that is
610:
Deor, thank you for comments, which I agree with. I will use semi-colons where I can. The bigger problem on Knowledge, though, is not non-restrictive appositives that appear as items in lists but those that don't, the latter being the vast majority.
3789:
I agree with David's general rule. One possible exception might be a very lengthy article, where the topic is wikilinked in the lead, and then not mentioned again until deep into the article. In this case, a second wikilink might be a good idea.
353:
I'm more concerned with the tone of the articles, I keep seeing references to 'reads like an essay' or 'sounds like a paper.' I'm not sure what they are supposed to read like, I've always thought articles in encyclopedias were essays on topics.
231:
More precisely: I just uploaded a low-res JPG of a movie poster for a 1978 movie. That all went well. I unfortunately spelled its filename wrong: "Stringray..." instead of "Stingray...". The article for the movie has long been existence,
1183:
as well. One of the problems which sometimes occurs with links via Wikidata is that a Knowledge article may only be pointed at by one Wikidata item. If you try to link a second Wikidata item to an article, it won't let you, but that can be
2512:
photo for the entry. My questions: A) does such an e-mail fulfill copyright requirements? and B) how do I provide that assurance to Knowledge once the photo is added to the entry? Thanks to anyone who can help me. Best, intimeagain
2125:
reused. Therefore, I'm a little confused - should I put my job title and main purpose at Knowledge in my user page or just leave it empty? Does an empty user page affect the credibility of my contributions? What's the happy minimum?
2317:
It should be to the right of "Help." I'm sorry but I'm not sure why it's not there, perhaps it's a browser issue interfering with a script. I'm sure someone who is more technically minded than me will be a long shortly to help you.
1179:, which is a separate project from Knowledge: if you pick the 'Edit links' link, it takes you to editing an item in Wikidata, which will have a page name of the form Q1234, but it can and ideally should have a more people-friendly 4164:, who is something of Knowledge's resident text copyright cleaner-upper. She doesn't have any legal standing, but DOES have a VERY lot of experience in the area, so she is who I go to first on these matters. Does that help? -- 1389:
So long as a) you aren't dodging a block or trying to circumvent other sanctions and b) you don't switch back-and-forth between the accounts to give the illusion that you are two different people, you should have no problems.
3818:
Overlinking can be a real problem, but I think all of us have swung back and forth on this pendulum. I tend to wikilink major ideas in both the infobox AND the main article space (or lead) but that may just be a bad habit.
2350:
controls and to the left of "Named References" is where the cite templates can be found now. Click & choose the kind of reference you are using and the ref will be inserted like with old "Cite" button. Does this help?
2616:
The problem is that you don't have a picture set - because of this, the page is rotating among several pre-set profile pictures. To use a particular image of your choice, find a file and put the filename after the
2653:, and saw an article named 'Literary Works in the 1930s' requested. I know that that does not mean it has to be created, but wanted to ask other people's opinions on creating a section of pages, Literary works of 1309:
Hello Miss Bono. Not sure what you mean by "delete my account". If you don't wish to work in Knowledge anymore, you can simply stop contributing. If you wish to change the name of your account, you can do so at
4138:
I've put the appropriate flag on the page and commented my words above in it. If I'm reading this whole thing right, it will get flagged on an automatic report and someone will look into it and open discussion.
3845:
Infoboxes and succession boxes are really sidebars to the main article, imho, so I generally link in all three locations. I only use one wikilink within the article body itself (or most internal tables), though.
3756:
So how often does one wikilink? Example, the article is about an ukulele player and the word ukulele appears many times. Do you link it every time? Once a paragraph? Once a section? Just the first appearance?
3469:
I'm not sure what you mean by "official page" but the usual meaning on the Internet is a page endorsed by the subject and controlled by the subject or a party acting on their behalf. Knowledge has no such thing.
2189:
Describe your interests and work on Knowledge to the exact level of detail that you're comfortable with. Disclose conflicts of interest openly and frankly, as this will be to your benefit in the long run.
847:
Thanks for your further comments, Revent. In the original discussion, Deor suggested I use semi-colons. I have always been aware of their use in these circumstances and I think I'll use them more in the
643:
Again it seems that the some people in the linked conversation mistook your edits for introducing Oxford commas (as explored also on your talk page). I think drawing up an MOS guideline or at least an
1551:{{User:MiszaBot/config |algo=old(31d) |archive=User talk:Cullen328/Archive %(1)d |counter=1 |maxarchivesize=70K |archiveheader={{talk archive navigation}} |minthreadstoarchive=1 |minthreadsleft=4 }} 280:
Cool, thanks, but what triggered that to happen? My posting a question here? My obvious typo? What if the typo hadn't been so glaringly obvious? (Just want to make sure I'm self-sufficient) --
824:
a semicolon). There seem to be quite a few people with 'emotional attachments' to 'incorrect' arguments for what ends up being the 'right' punctuation. This is /especially/ true nearly every time
4315:
Hopefully you read this with the humor it was intended :) I know many of us have lived through the frustration of feeling like Knowledge editors are the only ones who actually follow the rules.
2381:
I toggle a second line of submenus that only includes items pertaining to those menu selections. However, I have found that reloading the page with the edit window open will randomly make the
1144: 908:
Linguists do not normally use the term to refer to orthographical rules, although usage books and style guides that call themselves grammars may also refer to spelling and punctuation.
1580:
takes anywhere from a few minutes to a few days for MiszaBot to start her archiving, but soon enough you should see an archive box and fewer articles in the talk page. Happy editing!
539:
Yup, go right ahead! If you post a pseudo-article about your product/company/whatever, you might run into troubles, but a simple link (and short description) should be just fine. –
899:
I think you're another victim of a (common) misunderstanding, from the 'sense' of the argument you made. Sorry if I get a bet pedantic here, but it is of 'general' interest (I hope)
3431:, both of which we try to strive for in all Knowledge articles. I'd recommend that instead, you request that the article be written by an experienced editor, which you can do at 379:
In my experience you should expect people to be polite and constructive and if there are conflicts the people who are cool and reasoned tend to eventually win out. Happy editing!
1835: 1750: 3362:) and trim and source the "Industry recognition" section (or drop it altogether and merge the pertinent content into the rest of the article) and I reckon you're about done. 604:
I was disheartened with the situation and withdrew for a short while, during which time the original conversation was archived. I would like to reply to those who responded.
885:
Thanks for the advice in your last bullet point. I haven't posted anything yet on the MOS talk pages but will soon. I agree with your sentiments about newspapers and usage!
2553: 3474:. If a page about your company is made then everybody will be able to edit it and if well-sourecd negative content is added then you will have no authority to remove it. 3592:
to the External links section of relevant articles. There are about 400 finding aids and I wonder whether there is a way to automate this process. Any idea is welcomed!
3607:
Please don't even consider this without getting consensus first. You'll need to convince people that doing so will add value to the articles, and is consistent with
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If it helps, I think the article's pretty close to completion; the lead and the "Early life..." sections are quite good. Clean out the inappropriate language (
4160:. A user experienced in investigating these problems will deal with it there, though it may take some time given the backlog. Another avenue is to contact 4093:
First of all, it is entirely possible that this a reverse copy job and there isn't a problem. I don't know how to go about figuring that out at this point.
4096:
Second, if it is a problem, I want to work on a re-write and don't want the work to disappear, have it pegged to my sandbox or something, but not deleted.
1547:
I want to set up an archive for Cullen328 and when I post this in the header of his talk it doesn't show anything. Can someone help?? Thanks in advance
1344:
I read that and I am sure I want to make a Clean Start. Can some admin help me by guiding me. I have a strong reason for wanting to make a clean start.
607:
ScarletRibbons and Revent, thank you for your help, but I'm afraid you are both quite wrong. Please read what I wrote again and also read my talk page.
3952:
Hello 81.145, and welcome! I'm not sure I understand what you're asking, but it seems like you're asking a question that may be better answered at the
438:
there's something but it might be an acronym) then feel free to leave a message on the editor's talk page asking for some explanation. I'm primarily a
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was automatically created for it. So the right thing to do was to merge the two wikidata items, which you effectively did, by removing the link from
941:
With reference to the distinction between restrictive and non-restrictive appositives, I disagree with how you understand the difference. You stated
521:
says: "You are also welcome to include a simple link to your personal home page, although you should not surround it with any promotional language."
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in their own right (i.e. they should have a Knowledge article, or the potential for one, in and of themselves). They would also need to be sourced.
398:. I get the point, about not 'owning' the article and am comfortable with the concept, I've been working another wiki for years. But if everyone 2457:
menu disappears if you view enough different versions of pages. It's rather aggravating, and it happens to me all the time. What you should do is
500: 4089:
I was working on a biography and realized that the wording was almost identical, same order, etc., flags that someone had been copying someone.
2489:
Looks like that has got it! Thanks all! Funny how the cite menu loads distinctly and visibly (with a slight delay) later on the screen though.
2276:
and welcome. In the editing box click "cite" which is top right in blue, then the "templates" menu box appears on the left. See if that works.
1745: 790:
This is, however, a direct response to something you describe as 'correct usage' on your talk page. Surry if the point has already been made.
3252:
let people know it exists. That is the hardest part, once that is done, if it is interesting to people, it will quickly grow on its own. :)
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Thanks EBY! If you check out my bio page, you can see the five articles for review listed and linked from My Projects, and they are all bios!
1573: 130:
is the closet that you will get to what you are looking for. It shows all of the pages that you have nominated for deletion. Happy editing!
3938: 943:
If an appositive is set off by commas then it is by definition non-restrictive, and if it is not set off by commas then it is restrictive.
1959:
that the neutrality issues have been resolved you can edit the article and delete {{POV|date=April 2013}} from the very top of the page.
1127:
Linked article pasted Гавриил Мелитенский. But when clicking ok, it comes back with error saying that article already exist. Please help.
2473: 1692:
Thanks to both of you. I want to keep the introductory material at the top of my talk page, and I think that Technical13 has done that.
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Miss Bono, I agree with Technical 13. The harassment is over and the other user has been indefinitely blocked. Please continue editing.
1187:
It looks as if when the items were created from ru, this was not linked up with the other language entries, so a separate wikidata item
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Jayron, absolutely right. Why, just last night I was telling the whole Internet to remember to make sure they use proper attribution.
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Here is a link to the talk page for my article draft. Would appreciate help from experienced editors to prepare article to go live:
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seem to serve any useful purpose, and then successfully added it to the initial link list. You'll be able to see the link now for
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working on, pages that I want to monitor and projects that I hope to start. It isn't particularly pretty, but it is utilitarian.
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I just noticed that the editor who declined submission has left a suggestion on your Talk page which you may wish to respond to.
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I disagree with you, though, on your distinction between restrictive and non-restrictive appositives and your classification of
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So how cold is the feedback? Pretty brutal or matter of fact? Any help in redoing things, or are you left hanging out to dry?
1199:. The only bit you didn't know to do was to request that the now empty duplicate item be deleted, but I'll do that for you. -- 2468: 2143:
Hello Pandashu welcome to the teahouse. Your user page is yours - to do with what you like within our guidelines as seen at
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with a long term editor would be very useful. These things can seem like a long haul, but they are worth it. Best wishes
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Not sure if this is the correct place to point out, but I noticed there's an extra pair of dots at the DYk section. ☯
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and welcome. I'm no authority on the review process but I have had a look at your draft article, and the article that
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I am looking to make a count of articles I've had deleted (sppedy, prod, afd, etc). Is there an easy way to do this?
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I need to change my user name and get both my User and Talk page deleted. How can i do that? It is an urgent matter.
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neutral. Congratulations on your five articles! If you need specific feedback on one, feel free to share it with us.
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but you have to know all the syntax idiosyncrasies to use it. It was there about a week or so ago but not lately???
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similar to mine if you are interested to make the archives easy to access. Hit my talk page and we can discuss it.
1151:. Problem solved, but if anyone cares to explain why this might've happened, that might be helpful for both of us! 3149: 2650: 2101: 2097: 120: 42: 615:
It's not a style I'd use readily in my own writing, and I was just using it as an example to get my point across.
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menu appear and disappear. I can see no pattern to the appearance and disappearance of it though. Thanks again.
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To me it looks like this issue has been dealt with already, maybe it was because someone saw your comment here!
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To report a Copyright violation, I think you need to tell a admin. or you can also report it on the talk page.
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That topic already exists as the " in literature" series of articles. Here's a nav template of it (at right):
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and welcome to the Teahouse! That may actually be a bug in the afc reviewer script. I'll leave a note for
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It would still be better to convert the picture to a better format. The above linked pages explain why. --
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it go? Have I gone blind or did I just imagine hundreds of references I added? What am I missing? Thanks!
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Thanks Yunshui for your specific comments! I will try to work on the parts you suggest and submit again.
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editor, if you would like some response on a B:LP article. Sorry I can't be more precise but good luck.
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Interestingly, with more trials I have found that entering the edit page seems to always eliminate the
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Which WP user became an administrator in the shortest amount of time after registering? Just curious.
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There is no need to start over Miss Bono... Have a discussion with your friends on your talk page. :)
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Harry is the son of Charles, who is the Prince of Wales, and Diana, who is the Princess of Wales.
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I don't know if anyone else has notices this, but when I click on page view statistics, such as
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want to have included in an article, note that it will probably find its way there eventually.
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I've tried wading through the pages, but it sure isn't easy to figure out the right process.
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I assume that you're using the most recent toolbar. There have been some situations where the
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Hello Miss Bono, you are likely not looking at the right page. Try finding your profile on
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distinction that can't be made on the basis of what is 'correct' punctuation...it would be
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very helpfull - there where you will find all the resources for developing your user page.
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For future reference, one good way to check whether something is a copyvio is to use the
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how different people make different decisions about now a scientific development is used
4104: 3443:. Let me know if you have any questions about this process, and I'd be happy to help. 4124: 4067: 3953: 3791: 3728: 3704: 3616: 3302: 3298: 3293:
and welcome. It seems to me that the article is written in a way that it appears to be
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Well the link is to a blog, so I wanted to be sure that's ok by WP:Userpage standards.
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so long as they provide proper attribution that is compliant with Knowledge's license.
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If you write about yourself, your group or your company, once the article is created,
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How do I nominate for something to appear on the On This Day box on the main page?--
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with every edit. If there is anything publicly available on a topic that you would
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this and have the associated tags removed, too.Purwthrub 12:20, 6 June 2013 (UTC)
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For some reason, my profile picture changed to a house picture. Someone plz help.
3301:. However, the editor who declined the article raised a number of issues include 213:
How do I rename it, or delete it and start over? I don't know how to do either.
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Heya unrepentant Taco! You've made edits to 4 deleted articles. Here they are:
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menu. Refreshing the page with the edit box open appears to repeatedly make the
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thanks, can you go to Cullen328 talk page and see if I didn't mess things up??
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Instead of the long, detailed response that I started to write, I'll just quote
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If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
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Well, that's an aggravating situation. OK, have you tried a different browser?
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Thanks for the advice, Ozob. I'm sure you'll be there to fight my corner too!
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Hello Aggie 80, and welcome back. You can report the suspected violation at
2100:. There's a section for each main page box, so your inquiry would be best at 1836:
WP:WikiProject Articles for creation/Help desk#Review of Mechanical amplifier
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The relevant part of the 'definition' is that a 'non-restrictive appositive'
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for editing so syntax errors and omissions like that show up really easily.
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has the same meaning, but re-written to use 'non-restrictive appositives'.
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in your request about your business , which can support your case for why
236:. So, just looking for the right way to fix my typo in the JPG filename: 2173: 1176: 550:
The best "short description", in my opinion, is the name of the website.
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Knowledge:Main_Page/Errors#Errors in the current or next Did you know...
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Welcome to the Teahouse, UnrepentantTaco! Unfortunately, I believe that
3112:. Seems like the image didn't upload correctly... Try reuploading it, 3005:
Just simply find your profile and click on edit. I hope this helps. :)
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Harry is the son of Charles Prince of Wales and Diana Princess of Wales
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But it is still grammatically correct. The same can be done with this:
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May I suggest not an editor, but instead a page? The correct forum is
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What is the best way to get relevant, verifiable citation and sources?
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out when closing one of the refs and the link was missing a ]. I use
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but of 'usage'. This is a fully grammatical, but 'unpointed' sentence:
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copyright. You can find instructions for what you're trying to do at
1891:(using the Archive option); if you're researching an academic topic, 207:
At the moment of uploading, I saw I had made a typo in the filename:
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Not exactly true. The entire Internet can copy a Knowledge article
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The upload page specifically lists .tif files as being acceptable.
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There is an "official" place to comment on errors at the main page:
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is also very useful. Beyond that, there's always help available at
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Has anyone else noticed any weird goings on, such as the ref tags
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Welcome to the Teahouse. Generally just link the first time, see
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explicitly recommends converting .tif images to .jpg or .gif. --
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Hi, welcome to the Teahouse. My two go-to sites for sources are
256:
Heya ResearcherQ. It looks like someone already moved it. See
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does not list it as a preferred format for any image type, and
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menu appear, in the last few trials I have performed tonight.
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I have no desire at all to get involved in MOS drama, though.
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The edit button is on the top right after your Profile name.
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Sorry but I have no "Templates" square or anything below the
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what is considered as encyclopedia tone and reliable source?
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How can one remove a NPOV tag which is no longer applicable?
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Thomas Edison, the inventor, was the last of seven children.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/File:Stringray_movie_poster_1978.jpg
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http://en.wikipedia.org/File:Stringray_movie_poster_1978.jpg
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I misspelled a jpg file I uploaded -- how can I fix my typo?
3297:. It is also difficult to determine whether the subject is 2571:
H3ll0!! I can help a little bit. Drop a line in my talk ;)
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It looks good to me. I guess we'll really see soon enough.
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Automated harvesting links and adding to relevant articles
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be signed? and if not, shouldn't it say "we noticed"? —
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See Yunshui's answer below, I think it covers it better.
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I'm not sure Knowledge supports .tif files for viewing.
1899:, if you don't mind waiting a few days. Hope that helps, 1740:
How exactly does the wikipedia review process take place?
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I have no idea what you did for the ref tags, but thanks
107:
How can I find a count of articles that I've had deleted?
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3) Use that one, and not the first account, from now on.
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At UC Irvine, we are interested in adding links to our
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Knowledge:User pages#What may I have in my user pages?
3047:(or go directly to the spot on that page by clicking 3548:
to control its content, or to delete it outside the
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moved it and gave a url to your post in the summary.
4103:is the Knowledge page. The possible issue is with 4044:
https://en.wikipedia.org/Template_talk:Did_you_know
3398:
How do I create an official company Knowledge page?
3218:
How do I find a new or recient WikiProject to join?
2215:Thx much! glad now I've got some directions to go! 1519:Welcome to the Teahouse. In the box at the top of 626:And to everyone else, thank you for your comments. 3313:terms that you should make yourself familiar with. 2554:User_talk:MTJ78/Draft_of_Article_on_Juan_E_Gilbert 671:Thanks, Span. Could you recommend such an editor? 3087:Anyone tell me why this picture isn't displaying? 1244:You can't. You can add a Wikibreak enforcer (see 4257:If there is no attribution, it is "illegal". -- 4105:The Ukulele Hall of Fame Museum - Roy Smeck page 1776:currently redirects to. Your article has a few 1666:Thanks you so much! Cheers! Have a good day :) 975: 934: 917: 906: 875:Charles, Prince of Wales, will one day be king. 764: 4082:How do I report suspected Copyright violation? 1543:What's the exactly way to fill this correctly 958:modifies the first without changing its scope 871:Thomas Edison was the last of seven children. 8: 3445: 1991:for your prompt and positive response! I am 1153: 1124:http://en.wikipedia.org/Gabriel_of_Melitene 3540:Knowledge's Law of Unintended Consequences 2252:Where did the reference cite input box go? 1856:relevant, verifiable citation and sources? 2104:. This would get the speediest response! 974:As a 'further explanation', the sentence: 3496:Please note in particular the Knowledge 377:http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Apathy 2980:How can I update my Teahouse profile?? 2107:Thanks for pointing this out! Cheers -- 4062:Er, no, wrong section. That should be 3247:. The best place to start is to read 2684: 2622: 2621:in your profile's code. For example, 2618: 48:Do not edit the contents of this page. 3611:. I suggest starting a discussion at 3351:be appropriate, the awards should be 3154:Knowledge:Preparing images for upload 2342:Hi. The "TEMPLATES" square below the 7: 3134:. Reloaded and it is working fine! 2025:is settled on the talk page. Cheers 865:Well, obviously there is meaning in 2467: 1642: 1586: 345:What sort of feedback can I expect? 136: 3933:Rocket and space probe development 3243:Hello and welcome to the Teahouse 2479: 2469: 2117:What should I put in my user page? 1654: 1644: 1598: 1588: 1380:1) Log out of your current account 148: 138: 28: 3150:Knowledge:Image use policy#Format 2530:WP:Donating copyrighted materials 1486:Moving from sandbox to production 1419:I am trying to avoid harassment. 1147:on the English Knowledge article 596:An earlier conversation continued 4064:Knowledge:Selected_anniversaries 3652: 3092:File:Jim_Beloff_with_ukulele.tif 1070:Matty, you'd just missed a : --> 1014:, and the page view statistics? 913:This is discussed more fully at 505: 33: 2474: 2463: 2462: 2089:, thanks for pointing this out. 1834:The matter is being handled at 1649: 1638: 1637: 1593: 1582: 1581: 1175:Interwiki links now go through 143: 132: 131: 3773:Knowledge:OVERLINK#Overlinking 3020: 2981: 2572: 2548:Need editors for first article 1667: 1613: 1555: 1420: 1345: 1273: 1220: 1219:How can I delete my account?? 699:Knowledge Talk:Manual of Style 1: 3664: 3498:Law of Unintended Consequence 1778:sources that are not reliable 106: 4158:Knowledge:Copyright problems 3590:Online Archive of California 3534: 3324: 3318: 2629:as your profile picture. – 2327: 2321: 2285: 2279: 2034: 2028: 1986: 1968: 1962: 1815: 1809: 1789: 1783: 1316:Knowledge:Courtesy vanishing 576: 3429:avoids promotional language 3116:and see if it shows up. :) 3086: 2695:List of years in literature 1312:Knowledge:Changing username 478:External links in userpages 174:Eric Wallace (entrepreneur) 4353: 3752:How often do you wikilink? 3650: 3507: 2098:Knowledge:Main_Page/Errors 1955:and welcome. When you are 1864:) 06:58, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 902:To quote from the lead of 4141:The Ukulele Guy - Aggie80 4110:The Ukulele Guy - Aggie80 4007:on the development page. 1744:Hi, I worked on my first 1512:16:08, 6 June 2013‎ (UTC) 1318:covers how to do this. -- 925:Specifically, matters of 4325:20:53, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 4307:04:53, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 4273:18:35, 8 June 2013 (UTC) 4233:15:59, 8 June 2013 (UTC) 4210:14:21, 8 June 2013 (UTC) 4180:19:59, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 4149:19:59, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 4133:19:42, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 4118:19:25, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 4076:10:26, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 4056:07:17, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 4037:06:50, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 4017:13:25, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 3994:12:32, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 3970:18:50, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 3947:18:45, 9 June 2013 (UTC) 3925:23:06, 8 June 2013 (UTC) 3905:21:49, 8 June 2013 (UTC) 3893:first revision of WP:RFA 3885:20:57, 8 June 2013 (UTC) 3853:20:44, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3829:02:40, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3806:16:08, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3785:11:51, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3766:11:46, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3747:19:48, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3723:16:28, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3688:20:43, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3641:17:55, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3631:thx! will look into it. 3625:17:48, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3602:17:33, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3574:16:16, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3484:21:08, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3472:No one "owns" an article 3461:20:26, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3413:20:02, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 3393:10:15, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3378:10:01, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3335:09:55, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3283:09:22, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3262:13:31, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3238:13:22, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3206:17:57, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3186:16:01, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3172:15:20, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3144:16:04, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3126:15:15, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3103:15:03, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3075:19:22, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3061:19:10, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3039:18:53, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3019:I cant see any "edit". 3015:18:46, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 3000:18:08, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2968:20:36, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2941:20:34, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2676:19:11, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2636:20:37, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2611:20:10, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2591:20:27, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2566:20:24, 7 June 2013 (UTC) 2542:15:06, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2522:13:59, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2499:14:02, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2485:14:05, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2433:10:17, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2417:03:56, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2395:03:52, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2361:02:56, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2338:02:44, 4 June 2013 (UTC) 2313:02:32, 4 June 2013 (UTC) 2296:01:31, 4 June 2013 (UTC) 2267:23:49, 3 June 2013 (UTC) 2244:20:12, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2225:17:04, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2205:04:08, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2182:23:51, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2161:23:43, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2138:23:39, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 2112:22:41, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2080:05:11, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 2045:12:25, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1979:11:44, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1915:07:25, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1878:06:58, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1848:11:39, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1826:11:35, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1800:11:31, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1763:09:00, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1726:16:11, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1708:16:04, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1686:15:13, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1660:15:11, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1632:15:07, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1604:15:01, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1574:14:55, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1549: 1537:16:14, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1478:23:07, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1454:18:47, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1439:17:59, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1410:17:56, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1383:2) Create a new username 1364:17:50, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1334:17:45, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1292:17:43, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1264:17:40, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1246:User:Gilderien/common.js 1239:17:32, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1209:23:34, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1169:20:11, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1137:18:29, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1112:19:00, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1085:18:42, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1066:18:39, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1037:18:31, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 1012:and date (top right)here 994:01:14, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 970:01:11, 6 June 2013 (UTC) 895:23:01, 3 June 2013 (UTC) 859:Charles, Prince of Wales 839:20:36, 1 June 2013 (UTC) 817:23:46, 31 May 2013 (UTC) 800:23:38, 31 May 2013 (UTC) 784:23:32, 31 May 2013 (UTC) 745:21:50, 30 May 2013 (UTC) 715:21:18, 27 May 2013 (UTC) 681:17:42, 24 May 2013 (UTC) 659:16:47, 23 May 2013 (UTC) 636:15:42, 23 May 2013 (UTC) 584:18:40, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 565:05:01, 5 June 2013 (UTC 546:04:54, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 531:21:40, 3 June 2013 (UTC) 512:21:28, 3 June 2013 (UTC) 470:22:20, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 452:22:09, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 431:22:11, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 412:21:34, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 389:20:54, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 369:20:35, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 333:22:59, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 290:22:55, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 276:22:45, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 252:22:19, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 226:21:56, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 195:22:42, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 154:22:36, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 121:22:18, 5 June 2013 (UTC) 3954:Sciences reference desk 3441:your company is notable 3108:Hello and welcome back 2623:|image=Flag of Iowa.svg 2149:User page design center 1117:Link to other languages 1521:User:Agringaus/sandbox 1145:ru:Гавриил Мелитенский 979: 938: 922: 910: 769: 487:my intention. Thanks! 3980:Dear Teahouse hosts: 3249:Knowledge:WikiProject 2649:I was looking at the 2627:File:Flag of Iowa.svg 1897:the Resource Exchange 1392:Knowledge:Clean start 623:is a brilliant idea. 46:of past discussions. 3976:Teahouse invitations 3909:Interesting. Thanks! 3435:. You can also add 3421:conflict of interest 2642:Literary Works of... 2147:. You may find the 1774:Mechanical amplifier 929:are not a matter of 179:Hope that helps. -- 4162:User:Moonriddengirl 3114:clearing your cache 2373:icons. If I select 1149:Gabriel of Melitene 168:Quest for the Grail 3895:is illuminating.-- 3542: 3433:Requested Articles 3360:this page may help 2651:requested articles 2379:Special Characters 2075:Nonsensical Babble 1770:Michaelfaraday1791 1755:Michaelfaraday1791 1259:List of good deeds 1215:Delete and Account 18:Knowledge:Teahouse 3913:CarringtonEnglish 3873:CarringtonEnglish 3690: 3564: 3563: 3554:irrevocably added 3546:you have no right 3538: 3459: 3345: 3034: 3027: 2995: 2988: 2930: 2929: 2707: 2706: 2586: 2579: 2507:Photograph rights 2087:Bonkers The Clown 2021: 2007:comment added by 1947: 1933:comment added by 1681: 1674: 1627: 1620: 1569: 1562: 1515: 1498:comment added by 1434: 1427: 1359: 1352: 1308: 1287: 1280: 1234: 1227: 1195:and adding it to 1167: 1017:Yours worriedly, 602:this conversation 572:CarringtonEnglish 491:CarringtonEnglish 104: 103: 58: 57: 52:current main page 4344: 4268: 4261: 4175: 4168: 3966: 3961: 3923: 3921: 3914: 3883: 3881: 3874: 3803: 3801:Let's discuss it 3795: 3744: 3740: 3736: 3731: 3720: 3716: 3712: 3707: 3682: 3674: 3666: 3661: 3656: 3655: 3535: 3527: 3520: 3453: 3449: 3437:reliable sources 3375: 3369: 3339: 3332: 3331: 3328:let's discuss it 3320: 3307:reliable sources 3201: 3194: 3167: 3160: 3037: 3035: 3032: 3028: 3023: 2998: 2996: 2993: 2989: 2984: 2965: 2961: 2957: 2952: 2840: 2689: 2688: 2685: 2673: 2669: 2665: 2660: 2624: 2620: 2589: 2587: 2584: 2580: 2575: 2483: 2481: 2476: 2471: 2466: 2465: 2335: 2334: 2331:let's discuss it 2323: 2293: 2292: 2289:let's discuss it 2281: 2202: 2200:Let's discuss it 2194: 2068: 2042: 2041: 2038:let's discuss it 2030: 2020: 2001: 1988: 1976: 1975: 1972:let's discuss it 1964: 1946: 1927: 1912: 1906: 1840:Roger (Dodger67) 1823: 1822: 1819:let's discuss it 1811: 1797: 1796: 1793:let's discuss it 1785: 1705: 1703:Let's discuss it 1697: 1684: 1682: 1679: 1675: 1670: 1658: 1656: 1651: 1646: 1641: 1640: 1630: 1628: 1625: 1621: 1616: 1602: 1600: 1595: 1590: 1585: 1584: 1572: 1570: 1567: 1563: 1558: 1514: 1492: 1475: 1473:Let's discuss it 1467: 1437: 1435: 1432: 1428: 1423: 1405: 1398: 1394:covers this. -- 1362: 1360: 1357: 1353: 1348: 1329: 1322: 1302: 1290: 1288: 1285: 1281: 1276: 1262: 1261: 1237: 1235: 1232: 1228: 1223: 1161: 1157: 1109: 1105: 1101: 1096: 1063: 1059: 1055: 1050: 1034: 1030: 1026: 1021: 657: 582: 580: 573: 563: 561:Let's discuss it 555: 509: 503: 492: 322: 316: 271: 264: 190: 183: 152: 150: 145: 140: 135: 134: 85: 60: 59: 37: 36: 30: 4352: 4351: 4347: 4346: 4345: 4343: 4342: 4341: 4266: 4259: 4202:Fuhghettaboutit 4188:Wayback Machine 4173: 4166: 4084: 4025: 3978: 3964: 3959: 3935: 3920: 3917: 3912: 3910: 3897:Fuhghettaboutit 3880: 3877: 3872: 3870: 3867: 3799: 3793: 3754: 3742: 3738: 3734: 3729: 3718: 3714: 3710: 3705: 3680: 3672: 3659: 3658: 3653: 3649: 3613:WP:Village pump 3582: 3550:normal channels 3531: 3530: 3523: 3516: 3512: 3400: 3373: 3367: 3325: 3270: 3220: 3199: 3192: 3165: 3158: 3089: 3031: 3022: 2992: 2983: 2978: 2963: 2959: 2955: 2950: 2921: 2878: 2838: 2830: 2671: 2667: 2663: 2658: 2644: 2599: 2583: 2574: 2550: 2509: 2491:174.118.142.187 2409:174.118.142.187 2387:174.118.142.187 2328: 2305:174.118.142.187 2286: 2274:174.118.142.187 2259:174.118.142.187 2254: 2198: 2192: 2119: 2061: 2057: 2035: 2002: 1969: 1928: 1923: 1910: 1904: 1866: 1816: 1790: 1742: 1701: 1695: 1678: 1669: 1624: 1615: 1566: 1557: 1553: 1552: 1545: 1493: 1488: 1471: 1465: 1431: 1422: 1403: 1396: 1356: 1347: 1327: 1320: 1284: 1275: 1253: 1249: 1231: 1222: 1217: 1119: 1107: 1103: 1099: 1094: 1061: 1057: 1053: 1048: 1032: 1028: 1024: 1019: 1008: 1006:Weird Goings on 648: 598: 579: 571: 569: 559: 553: 480: 347: 320: 314: 269: 262: 234:Stingray (film) 205: 188: 181: 113:UnrepentantTaco 109: 81: 34: 26: 25: 24: 12: 11: 5: 4350: 4348: 4340: 4339: 4338: 4337: 4336: 4335: 4334: 4333: 4332: 4331: 4330: 4329: 4328: 4327: 4310: 4309: 4284: 4283: 4282: 4281: 4280: 4279: 4278: 4277: 4276: 4275: 4242: 4241: 4240: 4239: 4238: 4237: 4236: 4235: 4213: 4212: 4184: 4183: 4182: 4136: 4135: 4098: 4097: 4094: 4083: 4080: 4079: 4078: 4059: 4058: 4024: 4021: 4020: 4019: 3977: 3974: 3973: 3972: 3939:81.145.247.148 3934: 3931: 3930: 3929: 3928: 3927: 3918: 3878: 3866: 3863: 3862: 3861: 3860: 3859: 3858: 3857: 3856: 3855: 3836: 3835: 3834: 3833: 3832: 3831: 3811: 3810: 3809: 3808: 3777:David Biddulph 3753: 3750: 3651: 3648: 3645: 3644: 3643: 3628: 3627: 3581: 3578: 3577: 3576: 3566:MatthewVanitas 3562: 3561: 3543: 3529: 3528: 3521: 3513: 3508: 3506: 3505: 3504: 3503: 3502: 3501: 3489: 3488: 3487: 3486: 3464: 3463: 3425:minimizes bias 3399: 3396: 3381: 3380: 3356: 3337: 3269: 3266: 3265: 3264: 3219: 3216: 3215: 3214: 3213: 3212: 3211: 3210: 3209: 3208: 3146: 3088: 3085: 3084: 3083: 3082: 3081: 3080: 3079: 3078: 3077: 2977: 2974: 2973: 2972: 2971: 2970: 2933:MatthewVanitas 2928: 2927: 2920: 2919: 2914: 2909: 2904: 2899: 2894: 2889: 2883: 2880: 2879: 2877: 2876: 2871: 2866: 2861: 2856: 2851: 2846: 2841: 2835: 2832: 2831: 2829: 2828: 2820: 2815: 2810: 2805: 2800: 2795: 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UnrepentantTaco
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22:18, 5 June 2013 (UTC)
this
Brambleberry
of
RiverClan
22:36, 5 June 2013 (UTC)
Jayron
32
22:42, 5 June 2013 (UTC)
http://en.wikipedia.org/File:Stringray_movie_poster_1978.jpg
ResearcherQ
talk
21:56, 5 June 2013 (UTC)
Stingray (film)
http://en.wikipedia.org/File:Stringray_movie_poster_1978.jpg
ResearcherQ
talk

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