Knowledge

talk:Notability (fiction)/Archive 24 - Knowledge

Source 📝

2178:
detail then they can slap the section with a tag that says so. Many plot section of film articles how way too much information in them already. You can choose just about any random film article and prove that. There has been a general consensus that films should range between the 500-900 word marker (with the more complex films going deeper into the 900 territory...sometimes being necessary to extend past that). Television shows are less, because they're only 22-42 minutes long, on average, and you shouldn't need 700 words to give a basic summarization of the plot of the episode. The point of WP:SS isn't about just when to split off articles, but also how to write them, and articles need to be a succinct as possible. Chop out the wordiness, keep it tight. You can usually read through a plot section of any given article and reword multiple sentences into fewer, more "to-the-point" sentences. As for article size, WP:SIZE's current rule of thumb is that when you get to 60kb of readable prose then you should really start to think about separating out something from the article (the key in that being "readable prose". I've seen many editors just open the article edit page and see "72kb" at the top and yell to high heaven that they need to split off the article. But, when you just look at the readable prose the article is actually closer to 40kb). If the only extremely large section in the article is the one on the plot of the subject, maybe that section isn't as concise, and succinct as it should be. Knowledge isn't a substitution for watching, reading, listening, playing or anything else. As for the policy on defining what a spin-out article actually is, there isn't one. People interpret the spin-out guideline with their own perspective. Some people view it as a separate entity, while others view them as part of the parent article. Regardless, there are still policies to follow when it is spun-out. What we need to do is give a specific identity to these spin-out articles, so that editors who spin-out know exactly what they need to do in order to justify the separation. Spinning out just to have an elongated plot section is not a justifiable reason.
2139:. No matter if you view it as a "section" of a parent article, or an article all by itself (i.e. the former would mean that WP:NOTE has not bearing on its existence, and the latter meaning that it must meet WP:NOTE), the fact remains that you cannot spin out an article of plot information. In other words, you cannot spin out an episode plot summary just because someone wants a play-by-play of the episode in question. You cannot spin out a character article if the only thing you have is his/her particular plot information from their respective movies/television/books etc etc. There must be something else. It's unlikely you'll find any character that appears in multiple works with written about the real world information on the character. Whether it's how they cast the role, or how they came up with the idea for the character, if they appear in multiple works then they have a more realistic chance of having the real world content necessary for separation (and satisfaction of WP:PLOT). The difference between whether the article is considered the former example I gave, or the latter example I gave, is on how sources are applied to the article. If you consider a spin-out article a "section" of the parent article, then "third-party sources independent of the subject" does not apply, and using DVD commentaries, or interviews with the creators to discuss some real world content is all that is needed to justify the existence of the article (also, that there was so much info that it needed splitting in the first place, but that goes without saying). If you view it as its own subject, that's when WP:NOTE comes into play and you have to find those independent sources. So, what we really need to determine at this point is how we view spin-out articles, because that is going to tell us how we can decide what qualifies as needing "spinning out". Personally, I don't care if the article only uses primary sources (i.e. DVD commentary, Q&A with the creator, companion books), so long as the plot information doesn't overshadow the real world content. We have to remember that having 2 lines of real world content doesn't justify having 30KB of plot information. 1889:
SPINOUT, SIZE, SUMMARY, and the like suggest that spinouts from a notable topic that lack notability are appropriate. The second reason is the fact that non-notable spinouts represent a middle ground between hard-nose inclusists and hard-nose deletionists. They allow for deeper coverage of material that may not be completely notable but still provide useful information for a larger topic, but they also provide a means to prevent proliferation of many smaller articles on non-notable elements. As .. crap, can't remember, someone above pointed out, inclusionists would love to have X articles, deletionists would love to have 0 articles, spinouts allow that to approach log(X) which is a happy medium between both. The half reason that is associated with that is that there is no denying there is more than log(X) non-notable articles out there, and spinouts provide a good stepping point in merging existing articles that were created way back before the more recent adaption of notability was present without losing that information. So the point I'm trying to make is that spinouts not only are supported by policy and guideline, but that they are also necessary to keep the present battlegrounds between inclusionists and deletionists at bay without trying to create a guideline that favors one side or the other; if at some later point consensus agrees to move towards the inclusion or deletion of such articles, we can easily adjust then from spinouts without too much problem. --
1054:. Alternatives to the current proposal have been made which would incude them in different ways, but it seems clear that we'd all like to see them declared notable somehow. Unfortunately, that's about as much as I've seen agreed upon; the degree to which we should specify what is acceptable and what is not, and the specifics of those, don't seem to be widely agreed upon, and pretty much everyone involved claims that consensus is on their side. So, I've started this section to try to work out what consensus is. I'd particularly like to hear from Richard001, and any other users who are new to this debate, so I'll be posting a link to this at the village pump and the relevant wikiprojects that I'm involved in; I encourage other editors to do the same. The question is: is there consensus support for inclusion of spinouts without real-world coverage, and if so, what other criteria if any should we impose on them for inclusion? 3203:
harmful, and again, that is because there are a numerous group of people, a good number of newer ones but several experienced ones as well, that would likely leave the project if we were that strict on reading of PLOT and NOTE, and likely they wouldn't go quietly. Unless there is a much larger discussion of which way we take WP overall, FICT has to be written to reflect the current consensus, which is that these types of articles are ok (even spelled out so in a footnote at WP:N), even if this is incongruent with PLOT (I can argue there's a looseness in that, but), because remember, policy and guidelines don't create consensus, it is the other way around. Again, we could take the hard road, ban all non-notable fiction articles including spinouts, but that's against how WP should be run. If we do have a larger discussion (and there may be one developing at PLOT) in which way we take this, we'll reflect that in FICT. --
2866:- Good attempt Masem, I know you are trying hard to get something acceptable to all, but that suggested list is very bad. To discourage all "world of" articles, when GA's and probably FA"s will be made of a few of them? Or lists of minor characters, which by definition shouldn't have whole article explanations. I think this discussion is illustrating the impossibility of attempting to divorce notability and this spin off articles. Here's an easy guideline for spinoff articles; "Spinoff articles on a particular section of an article, such as the characters or the development of a game, can be created if there is an overabundance of information drawn from real world reliable sources and this information creates an imbalance in the article that trimming and summary style cannot fix." How's that? Tear it up, but it makes sense to me, it's how you get articles like Development of Elder Scrolls IV. 3159:) and with no original research. It is possible to write a list of non-notable elements that satisfy all other aspects of WP articles (V/NOR/NPOV, etc.) save for notability. We want to make sure spinouts are written to that standard. I completely agree that the typical ones that are out there are poorly written in exactly the manner you describe. This is why I am stressing that we need to deliniate to a point what spinout contents are appropriate, and how their approach has to be written. If we accept spinouts, we have to also accept that when they are poorly written, they need to be tagged, improved, and ultimately trimmed, merged, transwikid, and possibly deleted if no editor otherwise takes the initiate to improve it once notified. That's why I am proposing the breakout guideline to set what those standards need to be, because we get that situation that you point out. -- 3176:
real-world is hard, but that what differentiates Knowledge from Wookipedia - higher standards. Spinouts are a POV pusher's licence to spam articles they think are important; what I am saying is that we have to be firm about enforcing the existing guidelines if we are to avoid the existing situation where unsuspecting editors are contributing to articles that have no real-world content that will ultimately be deleted. We need to have strong boundries, and not give in to the desire to create lenghy plot summaries on poplar topics. From a notability perpsective, loosening the editorial guidelines is like drinking sea water laced with the salt of synthesis. I propose this section is removed, as it goes against
1874:
position. The position that subarticles should be judged as part of the parent article - that content guidelines apply but notability guidelines don't - is found only in WP:FICT, so it's not appropriate to assume it before looking at whether the other guidelines support it. That's why I've asked whether it has consensus support. If it does, then the notability guidelines don't apply to spinouts because the notability guidelines don't limit content. However, if it doesn't, then spinout articles are subject to notability the same as any other article because their spinout topics are subject to notability the same as any other topic.
3301:
necessary, and I would urge a full but not excessive coverage of plot summaries as a key part of articles on fiction, a main reason that readers come to these articles in the first place. The reason I urge the rejection of Gavin's supposed solution is because the interpretation under it would typically restrict the coverage of plot to the extent it would not provide the necessary information. I'm willing to accept Masem's compromise--inadequate and restrictive though I think it is-- as a matter of peace, just to settle this issue and get on with working on articles. If a few can't accept that, perhaps almost everyone else can.
1944:
bulk of our non-notable spinouts as they exist now are GA/FA/FL material, but I don't rule out the possibly that with sufficient improvement in every other area outside of notability that these can pass as a quality article. I agree that creating a second class of articles is a daunting issue, but that's why the quality of a spinout is important here; a high quality spinout that meets every other policy save for its own notability should not be seen being that much different from an article written with the same quality but that has notability, as long as the spinout's parent is also appropriately notable. --
3080:). Sometimes being a good editor means that we have to delete, merge or cut out synthesis and original research and insist on real-world content from reliable sources, otherwise Knowledge will degenerate into a fansite. This spinoff section is currently based on the premise that synthesis should not be edited out where it is sourced. Its difficult to edit sourced material, but I feel that is the cowards way out of this situation to allow spinoff articles without real-world content or reliable secondary sources just to accomodate it. If I quote the offending sentence at the core of this issue, it reads: 2270:
anything that we can call a compromise. We need to explicitly state the things which are made unacceptable elsewhere: for example, that a spinout with no sources at all is unverifiable and should be deleted, just to establish that unacceptable spinouts exist. Equally, we need to explicitly state the things which are definitely acceptable; I can't think of a criterion other than real-world coverage that does that. The middle ground is what we should leave uncertain - the current guidelines extend that uncertainty all the way through definitely unacceptable content.
1921:. And as Wikiproject Video games has shown, we can follow the current higher standard of notability and verification of sources and create massive amounts of Featured content. Yes, for some articles it can be difficult, but it also makes the most sense for the encyclopedia as a whole to require individual notability. Further, there is nothing that suggests that any of these spinout articles that lack notability will ever be able to achieve GA or FA status, and to encourage the creation of permanent, second-class articles with our own guidelines is very scary. 821:
in this discussion has an clear picture of how non-notable spinouts are dealt with as I'm mentioned above. We know a few lists seem always appropriate, we know a few types of articles that are never, but the DMZ between those is so large and vague. The only additional caution that we can give is that for any non-notable spinout, you should expect to be challenged by other editors, and possibly the only additional thing would be to create a talk page tag that includes when the spinout was created and why it was, to help remove that ambiguity. --
414:. I realise that words can have different meanings in different contexts, but it's still better to avoid confusion. Your 3D point of view is a valid one, but as I've said elsewhere it doesn't imply that we should discard notability. Considering an extra 'depth' dimension is fine - but the depth of coverage given to a topic should be governed by how much real-world coverage there is. A user should be able to look deeper and deeper, but only until the coverage runs out. When coverage stops, we should stop providing subarticles. 3346:
is truly sad that these things have not worked themselves out in the normal course of editing. I must disagree with Percy, both in the conclusion that this proposal is %100 inclusionist (%100 inclusionist would be a full article on every character, weapon, episode, plot device, and setting in fiction with no restrictions) and in his call for a prescriptive guideline rather than a descriptive one (the same arguments will be used and prevail at AfD, regardless of what guidelines say).
3360:"%100 inclusionist would be a full article on every character, weapon, episode, plot device, and setting in fiction with no restrictions" - yes, that is what the current spinout guidelines allow. Saying they "may be acceptable" and "may be challenged" means that AFDs will end in no consensus - so the articles will stay. The "absolutism" here is in the inclusionist direction. A compromise would have to actually say that some articles are disallowed; the spinouts section does not. 1903:
believe that most of the list spinouts - the log(x) you mention - could almost certainly meet WP:N if allowed to do so through real-world coverage of the list entries, which is why I've suggested including them by allowing for a collective notability. What I'm hoping to find out is whether the current article - which allows fictional topics to inherit notability - has consensus support, but unfortunately I've asked the question badly. I shall add a note to clarify what I meant.
970:
supports considering them to be still part of the original; for example, "their own articles" would seem to suggest they aren't, while "There is no need to repeat all the references for the subtopics in the main "Summary style" article, unless they are required to support a specific point." can be taken to mean that references in the parent article can demonstrate notability in the spinout. (It can also be taken to mean the opposite, if "a specific point" includes notability).
2163:, what limit is there then to how large those articles can grow? They could be massive articles if no longer constrained by being a summary. A policy would have to be made to constrain them from becoming epic retellings of the story. Also, I would love to know where people have gotten the argument that these sub articles are extensions of their parent article and not individual articles, because I honestly haven't seen that in any policy or guideline pages. 631:. Requiring a summary and hatnote are there for ease of navigation; they don't imply that an "independent article" has a dependency. Nor do they imply the opposite; you seem to think I'm saying that WP:SPINOUT is contrary to WP:FICT's position that articles should be judged as part of their parent. All I'm saying is that that is only said by WP:FICT. I do believe it shouldn't say that, but I don't believe that based on a misreading of WP:SPINOUT. 31: 1045:, which gives guidance for deletion debates. It states that "notability of a parent entity or topic (of a parent-child "tree") does not always imply the notability of the subordinate entities. That is not to say that this is always the case (two of the notabilty guidelines, for books and music, do allow for inherited notability in exceptional circumstances)" which would seem to suggest that it's up to the relevant guideline to decide. 715:
of another article, that article is now part of the section too. And if that article itself should summarize other 'child'/'sub'articles, they're part of the section too, aren't they? And so on we go, ad infinitum (well, until we reach an end to all the branches). Now that seems to me to be a very awkward definition of a section to me. One doesn't have to see articles as somehow completely unrelated to all other articles (
2382:
mid-point solution between inclusionists and deletionists; they fall out of main articles on fiction as spinouts, and they help prevent having many singular character articles around without notability. This doesn't mean presenting a list of characters is a free pass; it needs to be written to support the main work, and should be written per V/NOR/NPOV, concise plot elements, not told as a plot rehash, and the like. --
2904:
fiction. They will still be mentioned here in FICT as a possible solution for presenting non-notable elements, but how they are presented and what material is presentable in that fashion should be left to this other guideline. I would still make sure editors are cautioned that any non-notable spinout article is likely to be challenged, and that continuing to look for notability aspects is highly recommended. --
1999:; so even if spinoffs are part of the original article, they should be limited by the amount of real-world coverage. If there's no real-world coverage for fictional elements, their sections should never reach sufficient size to spin out; if there are a lot of small sections with no real-world coverage which are making a notable article too big, those sections should be merged or deleted within the article. 3216:
not and will be ultimately be replaced by real-world content from reliable sources. By allowing spinoff articles, and pandering to synthesis, we are being dishonest to a whole class of current and future editors who think the poorly sourced material will be kept, when ultimately it will be discarded in favour or real-world content from reliable sources, or deleted wholesale due to lack of notability. --
584:! WP:SPINOUT speaks about breaking out a long section into a seperate (aka "independent") article to make the information easier to read. There is a reason you leave a summary in the main article and put a hatnote linking back to the section in the spinout article. The reason is that the articles are linked. Why do you insist in forcing your obstinate, idiosyncratic point of view on everyone else? 1961:
because we don't want articles that exist just to massively retell the same story a hundred times in different ways and perspectives; we want those articles only if we can have actual real world stuff like creator interviews and reception information. I agree with you that spinouts are appropriate, but not unnotable spinouts. I just don't think it makes sense.
1391:'s compositions are forked into a list (or two in this case) as putting it in the main article would make an already lengthy article even longer. It's also my general understanding that lists should be about a notable topic, but each individual item on the list need not be notable itself. I interpret this in the same fashion, i.e. such lists 1577:
sections which recieve a bunch of spam, or useless info that don't contribute to the understanding of a work at all (that's why it's called trivia). it's talking about sections that editors have agreed is a bad section with poor info, and a blight on the article. the paragraph is saying that rather than spinout a new article like
562:"Silly games of semantics"? I'm not the one trying to change what "section" means. WP:SPINOUT gives advice on how to break out long sections - not long sentences, not long articles. It doesn't exempt the new articles from notability, and it doesn't say they remain part of the original. It explicitly calls them "independent". 1737:" is from WP:PAPER; it isn't my argument to make. I would agree that an article on a fictional element with real-world context passes WP:IINFO's requirements, but only if significant commentary or analysis is made in that context; listing which actor appeared as a character isn't significant commentary or analysis. 3260:
However, as the multiple megabytes of archived discussion here have proven (a pity they're too long to be easily read...), there is no consensus for the absolutist stance against sub-articles. Further, after quite a bit of blood, sweat, and tears, it has been agreed by all the major participants here
3256:
May I interject for a moment here? We all agree here that Knowledge is not a fansite (well, except a handful of new editors who stumble onto this page, but they can be educated), so that really isn't a point of contention. I also respect your commitment to defending the wiki from what you perceive as
3239:
Gavin, I think you may have misunderstood my comments. I am against spinouts which are not on notable topics (although I am fairly "inclusionist" on the meaning of the word "notable"). However, I want the word "spinout" to have a simple meaning which everyone can understand: an expansion of a summary
3175:
encourages us replace it with real-world content, context, analysis or critisism cited from reliable secondary sources. There is no need for spin off articles which cite trivial content from unreliable sources, when what is needed is bold editing. Keeping article content about fictional topics in the
2927:
However, the main reason I am commenting now is that by stepping back, I have noticed something: different editors use the word "notable" (and hence "non-notable") in slightly different ways, and I think this may underlie some of the difficulty in reaching consensus on how to word this guideline. The
2699:
I understand that non-notable can be considered redundant here, but I think we want to be explicit to say that these are only cases that apply to non-notable aspects. With notability, all these fly out the window. Obviously, spinouts still have to meet V/NOR/NPOV and other policies, so that's fine.
2402:
and fall outside the scope of Knowledge. I don't accept your argument that this is an acceptable "collective approach" or that it is an "acceptable mid-point solution". Lack of reliable secondary sources leads to unverifable plot summaries, which is basically a synthesis of primary sources at best or
2381:
I don't disagree that the typical way these lists are approached are riddled with other policy violations or otherwise generally written as a fan guide. However, the collective approach of presenting non-notable characters in this fashion, as argued elsewhere on this page, is currently an acceptable
2284:
I am concerned that, as was pointed out above, we may create a guideline that is out of step with current AFD practice, and accidently encourage the types of articles we don't want, as the nutshell description seems to say that making a totally non-notable character article is fantastic. What we need
2071:
You've moved the subject of that sentence from work to element when you add the paretheses. Notable works exist with both notable and non-notable elements. A notable fictional work could be notable only for its influence on real-world people; in that case, only the slightest of plot summaries would
2017:
Yes, that's pretty much it. I don't think I'd say 'directly' since there are other considerations such as readability which affect the amount of text; but I certainly think that the depth of coverage which is appropriate for a topic depends largely on the amount of real-world coverage of that topic.
1902:
I still think that misrepresents both the article as it stands, and either deletionists or the spinouts that are out there. Allowing spinouts to inherit notability as the current article does gives us X, not log(X), because all the fictional topics out there are spinouts of their fictional work. I
1818:
think they make it more notable, which is why I think the notability requirement is a reasonable one. If a fictional element can't find information of the type you describe, then that means no-one has commented on its appearance in the fiction - which is a pretty sure sign that it shouldn't be here.
1012:
is the notability guideline, which is summarised as follows: "If a topic has received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject, it is presumed to be notable." It doesn't state the converse, and goes on to state that "If an article currently does not cite
3422:
That's the way consensus is supposed to work, and in practice, the way it does. Guidelines proposed, drafted and implemented by a few editors will never replace the consensus of editors. This is why guidelines should follow consensus, not consensus follow guidelines. It's counterintuitive, a form of
3345:
I agree with DGG that Masem's proposal is our best chance for a compromise. Gavin and Percy's absolutism will only lead to further stalemate. I do not believe they fully comprehend the number of editors that consider episode and character list as de facto acceptable. I agree with erachima that it
3215:
You are correct that there's a point where sticking hard-nose to the policy can be harmful, but the situation as it stands is actually the reverse: currently we are too tolerant of synthesis and plot summaries, and this gives the illusion that this material is useful to Knowledge, when in fact it is
2961:
is using the word "spinout" to mean a spinout which gets special treatment in terms of the notability guidelines. But it isn't a good service to Knowledge editors to devise subtle meanings for these words. I hope that my suggestion about the meaning of "notability" will help to resolve this issue as
2956:
which I did disagree with was the comment that "In neither case is a spinout of a spinout appropriate". However, this is because additional meaning is being added to the word "spinout". In the simple meaning of "spinout", spinouts of spinouts occur all the time: an important character from a list of
2880:
What you describe is perfectly fine without the issue of notability, because if there is an overabundance of information from real world aspects, then the topic is notable and any issues we have with non-notability are out the window. I doubt anyone has a specific problem with that type of article;
2236:
that accessing the usefulness of the list is questionable and arguably, deleting and starting the list anew is likely to achieve a better end result than trying to trim down from that list. The more general case, a list of major and minor characters from a fictional work, seems perfectly acceptable
2231:
But that doesn't necessary mean that all lists of fictional elements are being challenged. The ones that I see pass through there usually fall into two types: lists of fictional elements at a relevence level too deep to be encyclopedic for WP (not necessarily spinouts of spinouts, but material that
2013:
Those last sentences are a dangerous problem... but I think I'm now seeing where you're coming from. You feel that guidelines from WP:PLOT say to "trim" down sections that have become too long with text which is basically just a description of the work. You feel that the amount of explanatory text
1873:
For the moment, I'd prefer to keep your interpretations separate, though it may be possible to merge some of them. Your interpretation is no more a "literal interpretation" than mine or Gavin's or Seraphimblade's or Masem's or anyone's. It's a fine and valid interpretation, but holds no privileged
1722:
So you're arguing that a subarticle on a fictional element has only just stopped being indiscriminate when you can find real-world context? That would still give free range to any character who can be linked to their actor and first appearance. Not a convincing standpoint. And throwing "notabilty"
1049:
So, there is some support for the deletion of spinouts. In particular, it would seem that we are required to find some standard which spinouts have to meet; we cannot simply say that they are or may be acceptable and leave it at that. Now, it seems that there's agreement that we want at least some
651:
articles are inextricably linked to their parent article. You state that WP:FICT is the only guideline that makes this assertion. I contend that this statement is demonstrably false. Perhaps, if you do not see this, we will have to agree to disagree (although I think you will find that you are in
3014:
While a section within an article on a notable topic does need to be sourced (per verifiability), the notability guidelines make clear that they do not limit the content of an article, merely what things are acceptable subjects for articles. No section or content of an article should be deleted per
2995:
This basically turns Knowledge into an open fansite. There is already enough spam and fancruft pretending to be sourced material without making the fictional guidelines somehow make them appear acceptable. If we allow this to go through, Knowledge will loose its reputation as a source of verifiable
2425:
TTN tried to enforce that, and basically got his head chewed off by dozens of others that disagree with that. Exactly how we treat fiction is not well defined. Obviously the key work must be notable, and there's some need to describe plot elements to support it, but the level where supporting the
2177:
I don't know of any article where the plot itself was covered in a completely separate article (which would go against WP:PLOT). Also, you cannot create a policy that governs how much plot information can be written down, becuase it's subjective per topic. If someone believes that there is too much
1960:
and other articles already, and as time goes by many more of these kind of articles will be made because they have sufficient notability because they have tons of reliable sources. And also, I think the argument that has been made many times is still true; we don't have non-notable fiction articles
1888:
I'm going to point that personally (the amount of time I've invested in polishing FICT) is that spinouts are appropriate for two and a half fundamentally different reasons. The first reason is outlined in the discussion above - though arguably certain readings of the policy suggest otherwise, NNC,
1683:
Yes, this is probably where we have to agree to disagree. It's worth noting that while content doesn't have to meet notability guidelines, per WP:NNC, it *does* have to contain real-world context and sourced analysis, per WP:PLOT. It's also worth noting that there are other ways of including most
1341:
Do you mean to say that you support considering lists to be part of a parent, but not individual elements; or do you just mean that you want the lists to be included and not the individual elements? I'm trying to work out whether consensus supports the part of these guidelines that states that the
1264:
Yes, I could have phrased the question, "does consensus support judging spinouts as part of their parent, rather than as separate articles?" - from what I can tell of the guidelines, it amounts to the same thing. What I'm interested in is finding out whether consensus supports that view (and hence
820:
This is approaching wikilaywering if you pick and choose parts; the overall text of FICT (in the para below the sentence above) warns explicitly that singular fictional articles are generally contested. But again, what a lot of this comes down to is the fact that I don't think anyone participating
714:
If I could just move things to the left a little... Now all this talk of multidimensionality and sections is getting rather silly. But this 'modern' definition of a section, a section is not just the section itself, but if the section should happen to be a summary (or even something like a summary)
3269:
Ultimately, the saddest part about all of this is that we have to codify it at all. In the magical land of best practices, editorial judgment is always given leeway with the rules, and wherever a subarticle was necessary we would welcome it on its individual merits. Unfortunately this is reality,
3154:
Every article on WP uses a small amount of synthesis to summarize information. A plot summary of a notable work is definitely going to have synthesis to distill key details of the work down. However, the point is that this synthesis should be without POV-pushing (eg what is actually described in
2881:
the sticky wicket that we are dealing with is when there is absolutely zero aspect of notability on the fictional elements, we need to find a way to deal with them; we can't let them spread far and wide freely nor out-right delete them without creating a huge chasm in the population of wikieditors.
2521:
explains why a real-world content supported by reliable secondary sources is our only defence against in universe plot summaries comprised of synthesis. The creation of a class of articles called aggregates that permits synthesis is not only bad practise, but is unnecessary, since the internet has
2050:
If no-one in the real world has seen fit to comment on its complex plot or large cast, then those aspects don't deserve a significant amount of coverage. It's not usually necessary to describe every plot twist, or every character in a fictional work, in order to give a summary of the work, and if
1771:
They are, and if you have sources to back them up then that's commentary from a real-world perspective. It may help to rephrase those in the active voice: The film-makers introduced Pichu, then Nintendo added Pichu to the line-up, then HAL Labs added Pichu to a game... those are three things that
1326:
they are so important to the "parent" topic that it warrants a larger amount of material. A "list of characters" article would probably, on the face of it, fail notability, but it is still useful in making a good encyclopaedia and providing good coverage of the "parent" topic. I hope that all made
946:
which states "Notability guidelines give guidance on whether a topic is notable enough to be included in Knowledge as a separate article, but do not specifically regulate the content of articles". If spinouts are considered as articles in their own right, this doesn't support their inclusion. If
3277:
Moving back to the practical realm (read: wording quibbles) now, I would suggest that for character lists the guideline accept lists of "significant" characters, as I believe that would succinctly capture the notion of major characters plus minor characters important to the plot. And if we need a
2948:
that there should be no compromise in notability for spinout articles (all Knowledge articles should be on notable topics), there may be some scope, in some circumstances, for spinout articles to rely on parent articles to demonstrate that the spinout topic is notable enough to deserve a separate
2672:
Some fictional settings are fine, but not all are. What we list here needs to be nearly universally ok with some exceptions, and single setting articles tend to be hit-or-miss. This is also why it's important to be explicit about what types of singular articles are typically inappropriate, as we
2269:
Yes, absolutely. The current, inherited-notability-for-spinouts guideline allows both. Now, there are some that should be allowed, and some that shouldn't, and that there isn't a great deal of agreement on where the boundary is; but I think we should have some sort of boundary if we're to reach
2240:
This doesn't fit with what I've seen, but I suspect we've seen lists of different elements in different media - so lists of characters in, say, a television show tend to make it through because they have a large enough fanbase, whereas lists of vehicles from games tend not to because they don't.
1943:
status, based on the number of episode lists that are presently listed there. Mind you, there is a certain degree of context that needs to be added to non-notable articles to make them more appropriate for GA/FA/FL status, including sourcing and the like, and I am not under the illusion that the
1767:
was first introduced in some north american movie on a certain date and was voiced by so-and-so, and was then later a new pokemon added to the lineup with the october 15th release of pokemon gold and silver in 2000. Then i go on to talk about how it was ported to the 3D world with the release of
1649:
Although it recommends starting a new article when the amount of text reaches a certain size, it does not comment on whether the new article should be subject to other guidelines. We're trying to decide whether it should be or not. You rightly say that SS has nothing to do with how notable that
1247:
So while notability isn't inherited, I think a lot of times it's a matter of breaking up the topic into 'child' articles rather than being separate articles themselves. That seems to have been the original justification for most spin offs -- to keep things more organized. See what I'm getting at?
729:
Personally, I think any article should be able to stand on its own without a 'parent'. If you deleted the parent topic, the article shouldn't suddenly become non-notable. If anyone has come up with a workable solution for allowing 'child' articles to be non-notable without opening up the doors to
612:
You seem very arrogant and sure of you unequivocal rightness. Your interpretation appears to be that when you split out a section of a long article, this section suddenly becomes a seperate topic and wholly independent of the article you took it out of. This does not seem to be borne out in the
3300:
of articles on a fictional subject should not be devoted entirely to the plot, and that real world aspects should always be included to the extent their importance justifies. The division into articles is entirely arbitrary and a matter of editing. I consider Masem's solution as the bare minimum
2919:
I'm sorry I've not been very active in this discussion recently - I've been rather busy. I have been following it, however, although in recent days I've not been able to keep up with the details. Since I last commented, there has been much discussion about notability for spinout articles, and in
2731:
to point from FICT and MOS to there. It's not quite a MOS, it's not quite a NOTE, but fits in between. We leave what is currently the first para in FICT on spinouts here to match with the previous two sections. This allows us to explain more on spinouts without weighing down FICT, removes the
2216:
This comment has become detached from what it was a reply to, but current practice in the AFDs I've seen is generally to require notability from all articles. As written, WP:FICT gives a free pass to all fictional articles to ignore notability concerns - but you may have meant something else by
2092:
Your second argument, your talk of merging and deleting, is counterproductive when applied on an "always do this" scale. I'll contend there are cases when this is a good idea, but there are also cases when it is a bad one... but that actually strays from the topic a bit, b/c little sections can
1975:
The point of what we're trying to decide here, and what you seem to be missing, is weather a spinoff is an entirely separate article or not. I'm not the best at explaining things, but from what I can tell, you're missing that important fact. Many articles are just going to be too LONG if all the
1664:
yes, here we have the base of the argument. and so all my arguments would fall on the premise that *I* feel content spun out from a parent article is a special case. I support this "special case" theory by pointing out that WP:SS already mentions three special guidelines for these new types of
3075:
of primary sources falls within the scope of Knowledge. My understanding is that where content is not substantiated by real-world content from reliable sources that are independent of the subject, it should be cut out not spun out, otherwise Knowledge will become clogged up with lots of spinoff
3048:
The thing is, it is becoming very clear that the content and style of spinouts needs to be corralled to meet certain expectations, and that's why I think we need a guideline on the MOS side to describe what is appropriate content for fictional spinouts. We still mention they are acceptable for
2580:
Non-notable spinout articles are often contested if they do not directly aid in the general understanding of the main fictional work and its real-world aspects. There is no requirement or limitation for what content a spinout may or may not contain, but editors should be aware that non-notable
1990:
The amount of treatment shouldn't depend on the cast size - but it should depend on how much real-world coverage the plays have received. If the first has received very little, it's likely that the characters shouldn't have sections in the article at all; if the latter has received a lot, it's
1633:
most often in the beginning, however it begins referring to these same "articles" as "sub-articles" midway when it starts discussing how these are different than regular articles (special naming conventions, navigational considerations, and special reference/citation guidelines). This strongly
1576:
circular. I admit i did not read where you were quoting this from... but now that I have - you took it completely out of context. An "unwanted" section, in this case, is one which is attracting a lot of unhelpful contributions... the examples given are the external links and trivia sections.
1034:
which states that "Knowledge articles on published works (such as fictional stories) should contain real-world context and sourced analysis, offering detail on a work's development and historical significance, not solely a detailed summary of that work's plot." If spinouts are considered to be
969:
gives guidance on how and when to split an article. Some sections of it can be read as supporting spinouts; for example, "Sections of long articles should be spun off into their own articles leaving a summary in its place" supports their creation, although its wording varies in how strongly it
3044:
I also have to agree that the need for these articles seems to conflict with other aspects, however, I strongly think we need to allow them to gain some sort of middle ground and peaceful editing so that we can then as a whole take a look at the larger picture and determine if we need to go in
2999:
My view on the topic is that "A spinout article on a single character or element that lacks sources or real-world coverage is never appropriate, particularly when the amount of content for that element would ordinarily be deleted from a long parent topic, due to the fact that there no reliable
361:
I'm all for a modern encyclopedia, but willfully misunderstanding a word whose meaning is spelled out in the online help seems like a bad way to go about modernising it. Though, if your goal is to make an encyclopedia that can defeat Khan, making rules that include every single member of both
3202:
Again, I agree with you on the basic concept. I pretty much agree that plot-only article from any point is not good for WP in the long term, and we should be working with off-site wiki a lot more to offset these details. However, there's a point where sticking hard-nose to the policy can be
2903:
inclusion guideline, but not the only one. Non-notable element/list spinouts are not notable, but the current general consensus is that when reasonably approached, these can be included. This is why the guideline split I'm suggesting is for only non-notable spinout articles specifically for
2939:
I think it is helpful to distinguish between the two, and also that it is important that we do not add too much wikipolicy baggage to the meaning of simple words like "notable". In other words, it is perfectly possible to have a notable article which does not demonstrate its notability per
2720:
I'm going to make another suggestion here, and that is, I think we may want to consider a breakout with a separate guideline on "Fictional Spinout Articles" (maybe WP:FICTSPIN). Take the bulk of what's already in FICT, what we're describing here, and what's in WP:MOS, and move it there,
1624:
If only for the sake of completeness, you freely admit you don't really have a way to make this support notability in sub-articles. But you mention it's a bit ambiguous - the only thing I can say is that you need to read beyond the nutshell description which is where you got "their own
1403:
but isn't. The list still needs to serve some "encyclopedic" purpose (whatever that means, everyone's definition of "encyclopedic" varies, one man's "cruft" is another man's treasure, which is why I don't use the terms "cruft" nor "encyclopedic" in these conversations as I view one as
1023:
is the verifiability policy. It states that "If no reliable, third-party (in relation to the subject) sources can be found for an article topic, Knowledge should not have an article on it." This unambiguously requires sources for articles, but does not require them to give real-world
2619:
This is just an attempt to set where the acceptable bounds are for spinouts, but I point out that there may be cases in the second set (the typically non-accepted versions) that are appropriate, which is why this guideline cannot say "These types of articles are not acceptable".
1846:
and define ambiguity of an entire guideline by citing simple semantic issues that are easily clarified when put in context. It is this perceived ambiguity that is the crux of your argument, so there is no need to delve into your supporting policies because they all apply to
2478:
Gavin - would you object as strongly if, in "A grouping of elements has established notability if there is significant coverage of the grouping as a whole, or if there is a significant amount of coverage of the individual elements," we inserted "real-world" before coverage?
1321:
articles to be considered effectively part of another article, where their inclusion in that parent article would make it unwieldy. However, some sense has to be kept of notability, so individual characters shouldn't have individual articles unless there's valid notability
2987:"A spinout article on a single character or element that lacks sources of real-world coverage may be appropriate when the amount of content for that element would be distracting or otherwise too long within a parent topic or spinout article, as described by summary style" 837:
fictional articles, no matter how non-notable, is that it doesn't ever go so far as to say that there are articles that should be deleted. "may be contested" is as strong as it gets. It establishes an upper bound for the 'DMZ' but no lower bound, and as such editors can
3265:
tolerance for articles on fictional elements that lack proof of independent notability is necessary. Yes, this does go against the apparent intent of some of our other rules, but it allows us to better meet our true goal of writing informative and readable articles.
3077: 1165: 1976:
pertinent info is stuck into one article. Think about it this way -- a play with only two characters could easily have its character list fit into the main article, but one with twenty probably. Why should the former get special treatment just because it has less?
228:
I believe most editors understand that WP is not paper, that hard drives are cheap, and that we edit in a multi-dimensional structure. The issue is what standard do we use to ensure that the encyclopedia is not simply a collection of indiscriminate information.
1013:
reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject, that does not necessarily mean the topic is not notable." However, it does go on to state that "Notability requires objective evidence" - so in the absence of real-world coverage, there has to be
3240:
section in a parent article. As such spinouts, spinouts of spinouts, and so on, are perfectly legitimate as long as they meet other guidelines. Our job here is to make clear what the notability guidelines are for such spinouts in the case of fictional topics.
1370:
for a starter, but I'm sure most everyone has seen at least some of that page or related pages before). It's my understanding that lists which are content forks of notable topics are generally acceptable. As an example used in the list guidelines you have
2362:
of primary source material, none of which warrants an article for any of the individual characters or a group. These articles are a type of list with long plot summaries. This section should be removed, as this type of article falls outside the scope of
3416:, while editorial process on the whole has never been in complete agreement. It is completely acceptable for these issues to be worked out "on the ground" at AfD and within wikiprojects. In conclusion, I point everyone back to the following quote from 198:
The debate is whether these articles/sections each have to be independently notable (sourced by two or more reliable, independent sources) or if the topic has established notability each article/section under that topic should be considered notable.
1713:
This is not technically a defense for non-notable sub-articles, but more against those people who say, "If the article is getting too long to be readable we should trim the info rather than spin it out." No one, at least not myself, has argued that
179:
My bad Ursasapien. Below is your original comment in the context of this page as you correctly point out it should be. These are indeed two different discussions and yet my comments apply to both, but moreso to the sub-article discussion I believe.
3049:
non-notable articles per WP:FICT, but editors need to be aware that there are expectations that these articles need to meet and that spinouts that fail these and cannot be improved to meet them (through trimming or other actions) may be deleted. --
2703:
I'm still not comfortable with saying non-notable articles are OK in those words. By saying they're OK on a notability guideline, we're saying that they are notable. The title of the page is "Notability (fiction)" not "Acceptability (fiction)".
915:
raises questions about the support in other guidelines for spinouts that lack real-world coverage. As I understand it, the other guidelines (including essays and policies) which are commonly stated as supporting the inclusion of such articles are
884:
True, but spinout articles have spinout topics, and it's those topics that need to have notability demonstrated. The depth to which we cover that topic must be balanced and neutral, and the only way to make sure of that is to require coverage.
505:
as a section of our article on Star Wars, not as a seperate article on the characters in Star Wars. With hyperlinks, we should be able to point back to the section in the main article and allow people to navigate back and forth seemlessly.
3088:"A spinout article on a single character or element that lacks sources of real-world coverage may be appropriate when the amount of content for that element would be distracting or otherwise too long within a parent topic or spinout article" 3390:. I am placing a disputed clean up tag on both the Aggregate & Spinoff sections. I suggest that these sections go up for review at a highter level, its just too big a policy change to push through just so we can reach a compromise. -- 988:
So, there is some support for the inclusion of spinouts, but it all depends on reading certain guidelines a certain way. Now, guidelines which are commonly stated as supporting the deletion of spinouts that lack real-world coverage are
2442:
I did not follow his story closely, so I only know of him through the debates here, but I understand he got into trouble for edit waring, not his perspective on notability. I think if he were here today, he would say that just because
2237:
given how the general case of a well-written list doesn't show up much through AfD, though there is a factor of the size and notability of the work to determine if a list could be trimmed and merged further back into the main article.
1168:
which contain virtually no real-world content. None of these articles fall within the scope of Knowledge, but if they were, we may as well merge Knowledge with Wookipedia and forget about building an encyclopedia based on real-world
3295:
I am not prepared to accept less than Masem's original wording in this section, which I think is already a compromise. (Personally, I think the real root of the problem is at WP NOT, which should be interpreted as meaning that the
2508:
to be well referenced, but in fact they are based on primary or unreliable secondary sources, mainly self-published fansites and TV guides that are not subject to peer review, and are terrible examples to include in any guideline.
2335:
I've added a new section on aggregate articles, to make sure that the articles that are definitely allowed are allowed without having to inherit notability. Any suggestions on improvements for the content or wording are welcomed.
613:
guideline which requires a summary and a hatnote. I am not angry, but I am passionate and your snide attitude leads to a passionate response. Nevertheless, I am logging off so any replies will probably not occur for 24 hours.
1071:
To clarify: I mean to ask whether we should drop the requirement for real-world coverage by considering spinouts them to be part of their parent article, or whether we should find a different way to include the good spinouts.
2805:
Perhaps, but we're better off with one accepted guideline and one disputed one, than with just one disputed guideline. Once the spinout issue is resolved, we can merge the guidelines back, if you think that would be better.
2700:
I agree that if a setting is questionable, it shouldn't be listed; we should only be calling out explicit cases that are known to be generally kept/uncontroversial, and cases that are generally deleted without controversy.
1195:
on Oct. 15, 2000 is a great supporting sentence. But some would feel it's not enough... this conflict is a problem (we could also add voice actors from shows and movies, and first appearances in other medium). Also, the
2978:
I strongly object to this idea of spinout, as lack of real-world content and secondary sources is a free ticket to original research and extensive plot summaries. In particular, I propose that the following to be removed
2067:
To assume that no notable work like this exists (i.e. a fictional element section with no/little/not the right kind of real-world coverage that would reach sufficient size to spinout), or ever would exist, is fallacious.
1098:(not the whole work!), spin away. If not, and enough is written on a given element to make the article unwieldy, time to start trimming, not time to start splitting. Simple, easy to remember, and keeps the cruft out. A 2581:
spinouts that cover in great detail the minutiae of fictional elements that may only be of interest to those who have read or seen the work are typically trimmed, merged, or deleted; such information is appropriate for
763:
should not be a problem. Nevertheless, can you give me some concrete example of where this hypothetical could ever be the case? As far as notability, verifiability, and neutral point of view are concerned, aren't
1491:- If we view sub-articles as part of parent articles, we are regarding them as content broken up for style/readiblity issues. Notability guidlines do not regulate content, therefore, do not regulate sub-articles. 2038:
for a higher ratio of real-world to description text, i realize that we can't always get there. I realize that there are some very notable fictional works which are complex enough in their "plots" or just have
500:
I suppose what we are struggling with is "what is a section?" If an article (a seperate page if you will) can be considered a section or not. Percy illustrates what I see as a basic misperception. I think of
2257:
But again, I don't think we have enough experinece to say exactly where the line is between an acceptable and a unacceptable list is, only that we know there are such spinouts that fall on both sides. --
2648:
It's probably better to remove "major and/or minor" as everything is major and/or minor. Perhaps it should read "A list of characters from a work; in some cases, a list of major characters may be more
1494:
That's true, if we take the view that sub-articles are part of parent articles. As I say below, we shouldn't start by taking that view when trying to work out whether the guidelines support that view.
1240:
is a clearly notable composer, but wrote such a small body of work that a works list could easily all fit in the article without bogging it down even by FA standards. On the other hand, a composer like
3140:. No guideline that goes against core Knowledge guidelines will be enforceable; it leaves too much ambiguity and will lead to endless debates about what is and is not an acceptable spinoff article. -- 2752:) would put other topics on the same footing as fiction; and it would mean we could move the controversial parts of this guideline elsewhere and finally leave us with something we can all agree on! 1129:
articles would have been appropriate - which is false. However, discussing fictional elements within an article on the fictional work is completely reasonable... please don't make straw men.... -
1422:
notable topics might have more than just a list subpage. For example, the discussions about For Better or For Worse show an example of a reasonable spin-out article that isn't plainly a list....
2732:
issue of what are appropriate spinouts from FICT, thus allowing that definition to change with time without affecting FICT, and so forth. This will shorten FICT (a common complaint) as well. --
2673:
know those are; this doesn't meant other singular element articles are appropriate (the list is not exhaustive) just that we don't have enough info for sure to state that in the general case. --
2822:
I'm thinking about the episodes clause, and I'm not fond of all nn episodes being merged... change it to "episode pages where the primary focus is on plot and/or trivia", so episode pages like
1684:
of the same spinouts without phrasing it as an exemption from notability. I'll look more closely into how the other special cases deal with things; perhaps we can find some inspiration there.
806:
From WP:FICT: "A spinout article on a single character or element that lacks sources of real-world coverage may be appropriate..." - that says that spinouts can be about non-notable subjects.
1935:
I will point out there is nothing in the criteria for FA or GA that requires notability; articles have to meet policy and specific attributes, but notability is a guideline, extending from
1050:
spinouts to meet our guidelines - in particular, lists of fictional works and (possibly major) fictional elements have a tangible benefit to wikipedia, and are recommended in a footnote to
2354:. The idea that groups of fictional groups of characters, which do not have reliable secondary sources to demonstrate notability, individually or a group, is just a means of circumventing 2641:
I'm uneasy about "There is no requirement or limitation for what content a spinout may or may not contain" because there are - such as WP:V and WP:NOR; perhaps it should read "There is
1842:
You say the support for sub-articles depends on a "certain way" of reading the policies... to me, the literal interpretaions do just fine. You add subjective connotation to words like
2447:
does not mean we should sanction it by loosening the requirement for real-world content based on reliable secondary sources. I propose this section be removed, because it goes against
1796:. however, i still feel that we should be reasonable, and if you have only a small amount of information anyways, then we should keep it in a list for now and let it grow - like with 1489:
Notability guidelines give guidance on whether a topic is notable enough to be included in Knowledge as a separate article, but do not specifically regulate the content of articles.
2669:
Ok, maybe saying glossary isn't the best, but it is appropriate for "list of terms" or the like for a fictional universe where they need to be introduced (Star Trek, Harry Potter).
2658:
In fact, all the "an article about..." entries would seem to be saying that individual elements aren't generally suitable for spinouts. Perhaps we should just say that explicitly?
1248:
It's NOT that some topics aren't notable in and of themselves; rather, the issue is that they are really part of the SAME article, just on a separate page for reasons of usability.
3128:
I don't subscribe to this view, and I don't think there can be compromise on this issue: I propose that this entire section should be removed, since it goes against the spirit of
1917:
To allow articles to inherit notability would be a very bad move. It will invite the addition of massive amounts of non-encyclopedic content into Knowledge, and make a mockery of
1148:
knows the answer to this question already: there is no support for the inclusion of spinouts without real-world content, as this would be licence for Knowledge to be flooded with
1551:(emphasis added) - This information isn't unwanted, it is merely making the article otherwise difficult to read by overshadowing other sections. And, appropriately, SPINOUT and 1236:
I think the basic problem here, is that length can vary depending on the work itself, and it's not necessarily tied to the content. Here's a non-fiction example of what I mean:
3033:
point of view. We have to find a way to address the spinout issue: it should be a compromise, but it should not compromise the basic principles which underlie Gavin's comment.
1751:
i know where you got the sentence from, i was just saying you used it... damned lack of inflection in cyberspace.... well anyways, so where do you get that real-world context
980:
which states that "After a point, splitting an article into separate articles and leaving adequate summaries is a natural part of growth for a topic", but it also states that "
2770:
article (TV show, computer game, book) needs to demonstrate notability (WP:N), and almost everything else (characters, LoEs, etc.) are automatically spinouts (WP:SPINFICT). –
2159:
Well ok, if that is the question we then have to ask this: If articles are going to cover, for example, their plots in full in another article if it is long and complex like
3408:
Feel free to take this for review at a higher level. We have already been to the Village Pump and had a policy RfC. The basic fact is that the guidance change occured at
347:
was talking about. We look at WP as if it were paper and all "sections" must be on the same page and topped by the same heading. This is essentially Britannica online.
161:
Of course, my comment was about the discussion here and makes no sense where you moved it. Could you either put my comment back or delete it from the other discussion?
1665:
articles (naming conventions, navigation, and references). It also just seems logical to me that because the content itself never had to be notable in the first place (
392:
is an absolute NON-issue. There is a difference between (as you put it) "willfully misunderstanding a word" and "expanding its meaning in a new context". The heading on
2043:
different aspects and elements that the level of detail required may still be only superficial, but still take up a lot of space. These same notable works, may have
1956:
I just think I do not understand why these articles should be exempted from our guidelines and quality measurements just because they are spin out articles. We have
3278:
corresponding word to point out that lists of everyone who showed up in one frame of one episode of the series aren't useful, "exhaustive" (or "all") might help. --
2522:
made available a profusion of reliable sources that were once available only to accademics. I totally dispute this section and it must be removed as it contravenes
957:
which gives guidance on how and when to split content out from an article. It doesn't say that the resulting articles should or shouldn't meet notability criteria.
1453:
support spinouts using parent articles to demonstrate their notability (although I am personally in favour of some leniency here); instead, main articles delegate
97: 89: 84: 72: 67: 59: 3382:. No matter how many editors want to create in universe plot summaries based on synthesis of primary material, it is still not acceptable because it contravenes 3331:
I can't - Gavin is wrong about what Masem means, but absolutely right about how Masem's wording will be used in AFDs. It's 100% inclusionist, not a compromise.
1957: 384:(a title if you will) ... this does not say how big a section is, how small, what color, what language, etc... In multi-dimensional text structures a section's 666:
OK, please explain to me how you get from "independent article" with templates, to "inextricably linked", without assuming that they are in the first place.
3071:
I don't think we are in a position "compromise" here, as what you are proposing is a fundamental change to the rules by shifting the goal posts so that a
1447:
There is no need to repeat all the references for the subtopics in the main "Summary style" article, unless they are required to support a specific point.
3447:
extra articles - let's not provide a stick for inclusionists to hit other editors with. Consensus is not 100% inclusionist; the spinout guidelines are.
2405:
Where content is not substantiated by real-world content from reliable sources that are independent of the subject, it should be cut out not aggregated.
1387:
be included in the parent article, but doing so would make that article much longer, so that content is forked to a list. This is the same reason that
2685:
If there's that much doubt about fictional settings, then I'd argue that we shouldn't mention them at all. How did you feel about my other thoughts?
2135:
Out of all the counter-argument rebuttles, the only thing that matters--when we are talking about spinning out fiction articles--is whether it meets
1558:
Whether the information is wanted or not depends on whether the spinout is subject to notability or not. Again, you are making a circular argument.
1644:
in a given subtopic to merit its own article, that text can be summarized from the present article and a link provided to the more detailed article.
2517:, not only to demonstrate evidence of notability for each individual element, but because real-world content cannot be drawn from primary sources. 2426:
work and creating "fancruft" is not bright. We need a short-term compromise, being non-notable lists, to figure out what the long-term goal is. --
2928:
main difference is between the concept of an article which is notable simply because it is about a notable topic, and an article which is notable
2920:
particular, concern about the idea that spinouts can be non-notable in certain situations. These concerns have been expressed most notably :-) by
2403:
plain original research at worst. This section is a free pass to original research, in universe perspective and convert Knowledge into a fansite.
1478:
If no one objects, i'll end up merging this above, to juxtapose opposing viewpoints, but below are some counter-interpretations of the guidelines:
755:. If the subarticle is completely seperate from the main article, why bother including a summary and a link? Why not simply put the link in the 645:
I continue to be civil and calm today, as I was yesterday. You do seem to be saying that WP:SPINOUT does not jive with WP:FICT's assertion that
410:
If you think the definition of section is inadequate, your best approach would be to use a different word, rather than redefine a word which has
202:
This is based on a misunderstanding of 'topic'. Spinout articles have spinout topics; they are not articles on the parent topic. The topic of
2744:
I think that separating the guidelines for spinouts is a great idea. I don't see a need to restrict it to fictional articles - having it at
2598:
Similarly, the following types of non-notable spinouts are generally trimmed, merged, or deleted, but against, this list is not exhaustive:
3274:
frightens people, so instead we must bicker over exactly what millimeter a line should be drawn at that shouldn't need to be drawn at all.
2884:
Now, as for the selected list items themselves, maybe its the phrasing that's bad. I am not trying to discourage "world of" lists, which
2047:
on their individual elements/aspects in the way of real-world info, or only those kinds of things that people write off as "not enough".
1395:(in principle) be included in the (notable) parent topic but isn't done so, partly for size reasons. As another canonical example cited, 1017:. It goes on to state that the various specific notability guidelines will give guidance on what other sorts of coverage are acceptable. 2790:
This should be where any exceptions are made. It's a good place to discuss it, and moving it to another page feels like CREEP to me. -
1372: 47: 17: 2232:
would not be present in the notable topic's article should WP:SIZE not be a concern), and lists that are poorly written in considering
2098: 1864: 1805: 1674: 1586: 1518: 1225: 1134: 1763:", well, the name of voice actors and when and where something was relased are all details of development. Let's say i write that 1634:
suggests your "ambiguity" is merely derived from semantics. And to further drive the point home, read the first two paragraphs on
1578: 984:
articles must still abide by the appropriate content policies, particularly those covered in the five pillars", emphasis not mine.
2289:, what kinds are discouraged, ones that have no notability, and those in the middle that require an individual judgment call. 502: 203: 2358:. I have seen many examples of the articles given as examples: they contain citations from fansites or other regurgitation or 1513:
quite circular. the order these are put in is poor for getting to the heart of the matter, which is really all about WP:SS. -
396:
section is "21st Century Text Structures" and in this context the current WP definition of section is inadequate to the task.
3374:
I understand your desire to try and reach a compromise but I don't agree, as this policy change represents a divergence from
2899:
I would argue that we have to keep in mind that notability is not the only criteria for inclusion of an article in WP; it is
2549: 1788:
I personally don't feel they make it any more "notable" which is why i contest the notability requirement, but i feel that
132: 2014:
should directly rely on the amount of real-world coverage - in this imaginary play, it would be reviews and interviews.
273:
issues come into play. The basic issue is subarticle=inherited notability vs. subarticle=needs independent notability.
2952:
The principle of not attaching too much meaning to simple words applies also to the word "spinout". One contribution of
2889: 2497: 2286: 2285:
is to say what kinds of spinoffs are encouraged, such as when there is a ton of reliable sources talking about it, like
1287:
If appropriate sources cannot be found, consider merging the article's content into a broader article providing context.
862:
I am saying that WP policies and guidelines, as well as common sense, allow for a cluster of articles to cover a given
1772:
happened in the real-world. If you can find sources for each of those things, you've established Pichu's notability.
1449:" This sentence is saying that the main article does not need to repeat all of the references used in the spinout. It 2745: 1317:
I can't speak for consensus; I don't think any of us can. However, here's my take on it. It makes perfect sense for
3322: 2795: 2444: 1183:
I agree that all articles and sub-articles should be well-written: no OR, POV, crystalballing, and there should be
576:
You hold to your interpretation, as if it were crystal clear, when there is no consensus for your point of view. "
142:
As this discussion and my comments impacts more than just fiction articles I moved my contibution to this topic to
38: 2584:
Typically, acceptable non-notable spinout articles can include the following, though this list is not exhaustive:
463:
On a separate issue, the term "inherited notability" has some significant problems. Take a look at this discussion
146:. I tried to do this quickly once I realized my error but one response comment (by Ursasapien) was moved with it. 2871: 2294: 2168: 1966: 1926: 247:
What criteria/methods do you use now to determine if a section is appropriate for keeping inside a main article?
2823: 908: 143: 3000:
sources to demonstrate sufficient notability for inclusion of the subsidiary topic within a parent article. --
1735:
articles must still abide by the appropriate content policies, particularly those covered in the five pillars.
1720:
articles must still abide by the appropriate content policies, particularly those covered in the five pillars.
1110:
are clearly notable subjects, so everything on and in those would be, right down to garage bands and my dog.)
210:
would be "Elan Sleazebaggano", not "Star Wars". So Star Wars' notability is not inherited by either article.
1102:
is notable or not, notability is not inherited from a parent. (If we allowed notability to be inherited, the
3452: 3395: 3365: 3336: 3221: 3193: 3145: 3005: 2850: 2811: 2757: 2709: 2690: 2557: 2535: 2484: 2460: 2455:, but if this section is not removed, then we have opened the flood gates for in universe plot summaries. -- 2412: 2368: 2341: 2308: 2275: 2246: 2222: 2112: 2081: 2056: 2023: 2004: 1908: 1879: 1824: 1777: 1742: 1689: 1655: 1600: 1563: 1500: 1347: 1306: 1270: 1192: 1174: 1077: 1059: 890: 847: 811: 788: 671: 636: 603: 567: 531: 427: 367: 334: 215: 3456: 3434: 3399: 3369: 3355: 3340: 3326: 3312: 3287: 3246: 3225: 3210: 3197: 3166: 3149: 3056: 3039: 3024: 3009: 2968: 2911: 2875: 2854: 2836: 2815: 2799: 2774: 2761: 2739: 2713: 2694: 2680: 2627: 2561: 2539: 2488: 2464: 2433: 2416: 2389: 2372: 2345: 2312: 2298: 2279: 2264: 2250: 2226: 2211: 2193: 2172: 2154: 2116: 2102: 2085: 2060: 2027: 2008: 1985: 1970: 1951: 1930: 1912: 1896: 1883: 1868: 1828: 1809: 1781: 1746: 1693: 1678: 1659: 1604: 1590: 1567: 1555:
in general doesn't make a recommendation either way regarding notability, because it's discussing content.
1522: 1504: 1467: 1431: 1413: 1351: 1336: 1310: 1296: 1274: 1259: 1229: 1178: 1138: 1116: 1081: 1063: 894: 879: 851: 828: 815: 792: 739: 675: 661: 640: 622: 607: 593: 571: 557: 535: 515: 479: 431: 405: 371: 356: 338: 320: 282: 256: 238: 219: 189: 170: 155: 136: 3242: 3035: 2964: 2615:
These should be considered as rough guidelines, and each spinout should be judged on a case-by-case basis.
2072:
be appropriate, and no subarticles on fictional elements would be justified, even if several subarticles (
1463: 1038: 1002: 2652:
I'm not sure about the glossary entry - it needs a note to remind users about WP:NOT#DICT and WP:NOT#DIR.
2018:
If you're at the level of creating non-notable spinouts, you've exceeded the correct level of coverage.
722:
When you talk about hatnotes, Ursasapien, you're not referring to hatnotes on the 'child' article, which
307:. The form of a "section" is totally irrelevant to the issues of content and notability. In other words: 3318: 2791: 2501: 311:... whether it is one sentence, two paragraphs, a "list of x", or a full page with subpages of its own. 2655:
Some fictional settings are fine. How about "An article about the fictional setting of a single work"?
870:
must meet inclusion criteria and the depth to which we cover that topic must be balanced and neutral.
325:
On the contrary, "section" is quite a clear term. It's a part of an article topped by a heading. See
3430: 3351: 2867: 2635:
That would be more acceptable. I've corrected some typos (hope that's OK) and I have a few thoughts:
2290: 2164: 1962: 1922: 1409: 875: 735: 657: 618: 589: 553: 511: 352: 278: 234: 166: 120: 2749: 749: 2576:
I'm going to suggest the following text to be added to help try to resolve the issue on spinouts.
1379:
is a notable topic, but many of the minor characters aren't (with obvious exceptions, for example
627:
If you weren't angry, you wouldn't be calling me arrogant and snide. Hopefully tomorrow you will
3448: 3391: 3361: 3332: 3283: 3217: 3189: 3141: 3001: 2958: 2953: 2945: 2921: 2846: 2807: 2753: 2705: 2686: 2553: 2531: 2480: 2456: 2408: 2364: 2337: 2304: 2271: 2242: 2218: 2108: 2077: 2052: 2019: 2000: 1904: 1875: 1820: 1773: 1738: 1685: 1651: 1596: 1559: 1496: 1396: 1343: 1302: 1266: 1170: 1145: 1111: 1073: 1055: 886: 843: 807: 784: 667: 632: 599: 563: 527: 423: 363: 330: 211: 207: 2896:
descriptions are appropriate as well. Any language suggestions or improvements are suggested
1581:, you get rid of the content (but that's just because it was bad content in the first place). - 2188: 2149: 2094: 1981: 1860: 1801: 1670: 1621: 1582: 1537: 1514: 1265:
the current version of this guideline) or whether it doesn't (and hence we need to reword it)
1255: 1221: 1130: 966: 950: 929: 921: 545: 523: 475: 411: 401: 326: 316: 252: 185: 151: 128: 2398:
There should be no compromise on this issue, as it is obvious that the example articles fail
1792:
fictional element can give at least one detail on it's development, which at least satisfies
1638:, you can see that SS is about developing a sub-article/spinout based on the amount of text: 842:
point at it and say that their non-notable article should be given the benefit of the doubt.
376:
Percy, you just supported my position and you don't even realize it. You said a section is a
2725: 1549:
information, it is better to simply remove that content than to create a new article for it.
464: 3426: 3379: 3347: 3103: 3072: 3020: 2527: 2359: 1793: 1710: 1427: 1405: 1367: 1332: 1027: 998: 973: 933: 912: 871: 731: 653: 628: 614: 585: 549: 507: 419: 348: 274: 230: 162: 2593:
A list of recurring objects or terms necessary to understand a work (a glossary of sorts)
1245:
has a works list numbering into the 800s and in fact has two separate pages for the list.
299:
WP:SIZE is about readability and navigation, not about subject matter. You are confusing
3076:
articles made up of plot summary and regurgitated primary material (as is the case with
1121:
your example implies that first discussing your dog or the garage band next door in the
833:
The reason I feel that that sentence and indeed that whole section gives a free pass to
3417: 3119: 2552:
section explains that coverage for notability has to be real-world secondary coverage.
2136: 1992: 1797: 1669:), that we shouldn't suddenly make demands on it because there is now too much of it. - 1552: 1289:, this is footnoted to include the example of merging minor characters into a list. -- 960: 954: 925: 780: 270: 745:
When I speak of a hatnote in the subarticle (or child as you put it) I am speaking of
3413: 3375: 3308: 3279: 3271: 3181: 3156: 3133: 3111: 3107: 2842: 2830:) survive, as it'd be hard merging all that production info into even a season page. 2771: 2642: 2523: 2518: 2452: 2448: 2399: 2355: 2233: 2207: 1936: 1666: 1485: 1161: 1157: 1149: 1042: 1031: 977: 939: 917: 776: 723: 1768:
super smash bros. melee. Aren't these all details on the development of of Pichu?
1755:
contain significant commentary (what's "significant" for that matter) or analysis?
1383:
has "appeared" in the comic several times). The point with many lists is that they
3185: 3172: 3137: 3115: 3099: 2832: 2766:
Question: Wouldn't that effectively make the left-over WP:FICT a copy of WP:N? The
2514: 2179: 2160: 2140: 1977: 1940: 1635: 1251: 1197: 1153: 471: 397: 344: 312: 248: 181: 147: 124: 3029:
I am very sympathetic with Gavin Collins' point of view: it is, in some sense, my
2496:
Sorry Percy, I totally disagree from where you are coming from, and the examples (
1991:
likely that all the characters deserve their own articles. The guidance given by
3409: 3387: 3383: 3177: 3129: 2941: 2933: 2510: 2200:
exactly. As written, its a reasonable approach to the best of current practice.
1996: 1918: 1458: 1388: 1366:
Lists are a special case, and there are guideline pages that address lists (see
1282: 1242: 1091: 1051: 1020: 1009: 994: 990: 943: 415: 46:
If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
2666:
I generally think there's major, minor/recurring, and then one-shot characters.
2604:
An article about a fictional character from a work that lacks academic coverage
947:
spinouts are considered as part of the parent, it doesn't apply to them at all.
598:
What exactly do you think my interpretation is? You seem very angry about it.
3204: 3160: 3050: 3016: 2905: 2733: 2674: 2621: 2427: 2383: 2258: 1945: 1939:
but is not required. Furthermore, most articles of this type likely can meet
1890: 1423: 1380: 1328: 1290: 1237: 822: 719:) to consider the normal definition of a section more useful for discussions. 113: 800: 716: 2638:
I'd delete "non-notable" throughout, as the advice is generally applicable.
1250:
Of course, this doesn't mean all cases, but it's something to think about.
1206:
elements of general encyclopedias, specialized encyclopedias, and almanacs
3303: 2202: 1122: 1103: 466:
at the Village Pump and note the discussion at the bottom on the idea of
2962:
well. I must say, the quality of the discussion here is extremely high!
2841:
Yes, that sounds better; though I'm not sure how well it interacts with
1376: 3114:
is very long because it does not contain real-world content based on
2924:, and I agree with almost all of his contributions that I have read. 1418:
I agree with most of this. I'd be a bit more inclusive and say that
1404:
derisive/dismissive/divisive and the other as nearly undefinable).
963:
doesn't speak about spinouts, except in the above-mentioned section.
799:
I am not saying that subarticles can be about non-notable subjects (
3171:
Every article on WP uses a small amount of synthesis its true, but
759:
section and be done with it? WP is not paper so your hypothetical
1764: 1188: 1126: 1107: 2663:
How would you feel about making some or all of those amendments?
2107:
Yeah, it's more of a style argument than a notability argument.
1400: 1342:
spinouts should be considered to be part of the parent article.
1216:(3rd pillar)... nothing saying it can't be based on real-world, 343:
I believe this is the stuffy old two-dimensional thinking that
2944:(in fact, Knowledge is full of them!). So, while I agree with 1187:
mention of it's role in the real-world. I think that stating
1164:. At the moment, there is a terrible problem with hundreds of 269:
Well, we are trying to come to consensus on that. Certainly,
25: 1090:
Easy enough. If enough real-world information exists to pass
1035:
articles, this does require them to show real-world coverage.
206:
is "characters in Star Wars", not "Star Wars". The topic of
2504:) given in the aggregate section totally freak me out; they 418:
exists to make sure this happens at the article level, but
1995:
on how much content an article should have is the same as
2888:
good to have, but discouraging "location" articles (like
2352:
I strongly oppose this section and ask that it is removed
1281:
I will point out that WP:N has another important phrase:
2610:
An article about a single episode or volume from a work.
2548:
A lot of that is addressed earlier in the article - the
2451:. I have never seen an article deleted for contravening 1646:
It has nothing to do with how notable that subtopic is.
2241:
I've seen lists of characters from games go both ways.
2093:
always stay in the parent, or be grouped into a list. -
1200:
state that Knowledge is an encyclopedia based on being
3094:
However, what this means in reality is the following:
1283:
WP:N#Articles not satisfying the notability guidelines
112:
NOTE: Readers should take a moment to first read this
779:- though the requirement for real-world coverage in 362:
versions of starfleet is probably the way to do it.
2587:
A list of major and/or minor characters from a work
2051:nobody out there has done so, then nor should we. 1595:Good point; I'll remove that from my introduction. 2601:A list of one-time or cameo characters from a work 1509:i apologize, i misinterpreted your meaning, this 3015:the notability guidelines, only whole articles. 730:anything and everything, please refer me to it. 3443:Good, great. Let's follow consensus and allow 2572:Suggested addition to resolve the spinout issue 772:articles expected to cross these thresholds? 726:specifically tells editors to avoid, are you? 578:gives advice on how to break out long sections 522:There is no struggle with that question. See 2892:). Lists of minor/recurring characters with 1958:Development of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion 1718:can be written about. You use the sentence: 982:This policy is not a free pass for inclusion: 8: 1579:List of TV characters that look like Pikachu 548:and quit playing silly games of semantics. 1730:on fiction, or the 5P, require notability. 909:Template talk:Subarticle#Entering the fray 775:Verifiability and NPOV, yes. Notability, 2957:characters is a common example. However, 2590:A list of episodes or volumes from a work 652:disagreement with a number of editors). 3423:circular logic, and wholly ineffective. 3078:Dungeons & Dragons spinout articles 1166:Dungeons & Dragons spinout articles 2074:Influence of Hypothetical Work on XXXX 1723:into it would be erroneous because no 1650:subtopic is; that's left for WP:FICT. 1399:could be included in the main article 44:Do not edit the contents of this page. 7: 2607:An article about a fictional setting 1373:List of minor characters in Dilbert 309:a section is a section is a section 18:Knowledge talk:Notability (fiction) 24: 3098:"A spinout article comprised of 1629:" from. The text uses the word 29: 2930:and demonstrates its notability 2746:Knowledge:Notability (spinouts) 2550:Defining notability for fiction 1301:Indeed. I'll note that above. 503:List of characters in Star Wars 204:List of characters in Star Wars 1761:detail on a work's development 1541:If a long article includes an 1: 2034:While I agree that we should 783:would seem to say otherwise. 422:covers article content, too. 2890:Black Mesa Research Facility 2498:Characters of Kingdom Hearts 2287:Characters of Kingdom Hearts 1191:first appeared in the US in 412:a whole article to define it 3257:a major threat to its law. 3118:as evidence of the topic's 3110:may be appropriate where a 3106:of primary sources with an 106:21st Century Text Structure 3487: 3457:11:36, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3435:11:14, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3400:08:51, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3370:10:08, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3356:07:05, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3341:06:46, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3327:06:24, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3313:06:14, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3288:01:28, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3247:18:51, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3226:09:39, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3211:00:37, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3198:00:15, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 3167:23:37, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 3150:23:28, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 3057:20:53, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 3040:20:44, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 3025:20:37, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 3010:19:51, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 2969:20:14, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2912:19:07, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2876:18:21, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2855:16:24, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2837:16:20, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2816:16:07, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2800:16:02, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2775:19:17, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2762:15:43, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2740:15:36, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2714:15:43, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2695:14:19, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2681:14:14, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2628:13:48, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2562:10:18, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 2540:09:24, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 2515:reliable secondary sources 2489:08:43, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 2465:23:36, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 2434:22:54, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 2417:22:43, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 2390:19:48, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 2373:19:34, 30 March 2008 (UTC) 2346:13:40, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2313:12:53, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 2299:19:02, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2280:14:49, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2265:14:29, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2251:14:49, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2227:09:55, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2212:05:03, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2194:23:30, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 2173:22:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 2155:22:44, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 2117:15:21, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2103:14:43, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2086:15:21, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2061:15:21, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2028:15:21, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2009:10:41, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1986:22:32, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1971:21:36, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1952:21:18, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1931:20:48, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1913:18:51, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1897:17:29, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1884:17:01, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1869:16:46, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1829:16:50, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1810:16:07, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1782:16:50, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1747:17:01, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1694:16:28, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1679:16:07, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1660:17:01, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1605:16:24, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1591:16:07, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1568:17:01, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1523:16:07, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 1505:17:01, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1468:18:32, 31 March 2008 (UTC) 1432:00:48, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 1414:19:28, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1352:18:56, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1337:13:05, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1311:13:17, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1297:12:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1275:12:27, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1260:12:13, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1230:16:46, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1179:11:47, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1139:16:46, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1117:11:06, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1082:18:56, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 1064:10:32, 26 March 2008 (UTC) 895:12:51, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 880:06:52, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 852:13:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 829:13:21, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 816:13:00, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 793:13:00, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 740:05:48, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 676:12:51, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 662:05:08, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 641:11:32, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 623:11:27, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 608:11:16, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 594:11:02, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 572:10:46, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 558:10:42, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 540:How about you go back and 536:10:23, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 516:10:05, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 480:09:59, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 432:12:51, 28 March 2008 (UTC) 406:10:36, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 380:of an article topped by a 372:10:22, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 357:10:15, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 339:10:06, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 321:09:56, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 283:09:37, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 257:09:31, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 239:08:54, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 220:09:58, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 190:09:28, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 171:09:19, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 156:09:14, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 137:10:59, 27 March 2008 (UTC) 2643:no notability requirement 2824:The Unicorn and the Wasp 903:Guidelines and consensus 144:Template talk:Subarticle 3108:in universe perspective 1473:Counter-interpretations 1193:Pokemon Gold and Silver 2076:) might be justified. 1572:this one, however, is 1162:real world perspective 1096:the individual element 2502:Smallville (season 1) 1794:what wikipedia is not 1640:When there is enough 42:of past discussions. 3317:I agree with DGG. - 2303:I agree completely. 1978:♫ Melodia Chaconne ♫ 1252:♫ Melodia Chaconne ♫ 1220:fictional content. - 468:Umbilical Notability 2513:says there must be 2445:WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS 3045:another direction. 2645:or limitation...". 2331:Aggregate articles 1397:List of dog breeds 1212:(2nd pillar), and 208:Elan Sleazebaggano 3433: 3354: 3286: 3100:original research 2191: 2186: 2152: 2147: 1115: 878: 660: 621: 592: 556: 514: 355: 281: 237: 169: 139: 123:comment added by 103: 102: 54: 53: 48:current talk page 3478: 3429: 3350: 3319:Peregrine Fisher 3282: 3208: 3164: 3116:reliable sources 3054: 2909: 2792:Peregrine Fisher 2737: 2730: 2724: 2678: 2625: 2431: 2387: 2262: 2189: 2184: 2180: 2150: 2145: 2141: 1949: 1894: 1798:Photon torpedoes 1461:to the spinout. 1294: 1285:, specifically: 1114: 1041:is a section of 1030:is a section of 976:is a section of 953:is a section of 942:is a section of 874: 826: 754: 748: 656: 617: 588: 552: 510: 351: 277: 233: 165: 118: 81: 56: 55: 33: 32: 26: 3486: 3485: 3481: 3480: 3479: 3477: 3476: 3475: 3284:formerly tjstrf 3254: 3206: 3162: 3052: 2907: 2868:Judgesurreal777 2735: 2728: 2722: 2676: 2623: 2574: 2429: 2385: 2333: 2291:Judgesurreal777 2260: 2182: 2165:Judgesurreal777 2143: 2101: 1963:Judgesurreal777 1947: 1923:Judgesurreal777 1892: 1867: 1808: 1677: 1636:Characteristics 1589: 1521: 1475: 1292: 1228: 1137: 1039:WP:NOTINHERITED 1003:WP:NOTINHERITED 913:User:Richard001 905: 824: 752: 746: 712: 108: 77: 30: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 3484: 3482: 3474: 3473: 3472: 3471: 3470: 3469: 3468: 3467: 3466: 3465: 3464: 3463: 3462: 3461: 3460: 3459: 3438: 3437: 3403: 3402: 3372: 3253: 3250: 3237: 3236: 3235: 3234: 3233: 3232: 3231: 3230: 3229: 3228: 3126: 3125: 3124: 3092: 3091: 3090: 3082: 3081: 3068: 3067: 3066: 3065: 3064: 3063: 3062: 3061: 3060: 3059: 3046: 2997: 2993: 2992: 2991: 2990: 2989: 2981: 2980: 2917: 2916: 2915: 2914: 2897: 2882: 2860: 2859: 2858: 2857: 2819: 2818: 2788: 2787: 2786: 2785: 2784: 2783: 2782: 2781: 2780: 2779: 2778: 2777: 2764: 2718: 2717: 2716: 2670: 2667: 2661: 2660: 2659: 2656: 2653: 2650: 2646: 2639: 2617: 2616: 2613: 2612: 2611: 2608: 2605: 2602: 2596: 2595: 2594: 2591: 2588: 2582: 2573: 2570: 2569: 2568: 2567: 2566: 2565: 2564: 2543: 2542: 2476: 2475: 2474: 2473: 2472: 2471: 2470: 2469: 2468: 2467: 2437: 2436: 2420: 2419: 2393: 2392: 2376: 2375: 2332: 2329: 2328: 2327: 2326: 2325: 2324: 2323: 2322: 2321: 2320: 2319: 2318: 2317: 2316: 2315: 2255: 2254: 2253: 2198: 2197: 2196: 2132: 2131: 2130: 2129: 2128: 2127: 2126: 2125: 2124: 2123: 2122: 2121: 2120: 2119: 2097: 2090: 2089: 2088: 2065: 2064: 2063: 2032: 2031: 2030: 2011: 1863: 1840: 1839: 1838: 1837: 1836: 1835: 1834: 1833: 1832: 1831: 1804: 1786: 1785: 1784: 1705: 1704: 1703: 1702: 1701: 1700: 1699: 1698: 1697: 1696: 1673: 1616: 1615: 1614: 1613: 1612: 1611: 1610: 1609: 1608: 1607: 1585: 1532: 1531: 1530: 1529: 1528: 1527: 1526: 1525: 1517: 1480: 1479: 1474: 1471: 1443: 1442: 1441: 1440: 1439: 1438: 1437: 1436: 1435: 1434: 1357: 1356: 1355: 1354: 1315: 1314: 1313: 1279: 1278: 1277: 1249: 1246: 1234: 1233: 1232: 1224: 1160:which have no 1150:plot summaries 1143: 1142: 1141: 1133: 1100:subject itself 1087: 1086: 1085: 1084: 1047: 1046: 1036: 1025: 1018: 986: 985: 971: 964: 958: 948: 904: 901: 900: 899: 898: 897: 860: 859: 858: 857: 856: 855: 854: 797: 796: 795: 711: 708: 707: 706: 705: 704: 703: 702: 701: 700: 699: 698: 697: 696: 695: 694: 693: 692: 691: 690: 689: 688: 687: 686: 685: 684: 683: 682: 681: 680: 679: 678: 489: 488: 487: 486: 485: 484: 483: 482: 453: 451: 450: 449: 448: 447: 446: 445: 444: 443: 442: 441: 440: 439: 438: 437: 436: 435: 434: 290: 289: 288: 287: 286: 285: 262: 261: 260: 259: 242: 241: 225: 224: 223: 222: 195: 194: 193: 192: 174: 173: 107: 104: 101: 100: 95: 92: 87: 82: 75: 70: 65: 62: 52: 51: 34: 23: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3483: 3458: 3454: 3450: 3449:Percy Snoodle 3446: 3442: 3441: 3440: 3439: 3436: 3432: 3428: 3424: 3419: 3415: 3411: 3407: 3406: 3405: 3404: 3401: 3397: 3393: 3392:Gavin Collins 3389: 3385: 3381: 3377: 3373: 3371: 3367: 3363: 3362:Percy Snoodle 3359: 3358: 3357: 3353: 3349: 3344: 3343: 3342: 3338: 3334: 3333:Percy Snoodle 3330: 3329: 3328: 3324: 3320: 3316: 3315: 3314: 3310: 3306: 3305: 3299: 3294: 3293: 3292: 3291: 3290: 3289: 3285: 3281: 3275: 3273: 3267: 3264: 3258: 3251: 3249: 3248: 3245: 3244: 3227: 3223: 3219: 3218:Gavin Collins 3214: 3213: 3212: 3209: 3201: 3200: 3199: 3195: 3191: 3190:Gavin Collins 3187: 3183: 3179: 3174: 3170: 3169: 3168: 3165: 3158: 3153: 3152: 3151: 3147: 3143: 3142:Gavin Collins 3139: 3135: 3131: 3127: 3123: 3121: 3117: 3113: 3109: 3105: 3101: 3096: 3095: 3093: 3089: 3086: 3085: 3084: 3083: 3079: 3074: 3070: 3069: 3058: 3055: 3047: 3043: 3042: 3041: 3038: 3037: 3032: 3028: 3027: 3026: 3022: 3018: 3013: 3012: 3011: 3007: 3003: 3002:Gavin Collins 2998: 2994: 2988: 2985: 2984: 2983: 2982: 2977: 2976: 2975: 2974: 2973: 2972: 2971: 2970: 2967: 2966: 2960: 2959:Percy Snoodle 2955: 2954:Percy Snoodle 2950: 2947: 2946:Percy Snoodle 2943: 2937: 2935: 2931: 2925: 2923: 2922:Percy Snoodle 2913: 2910: 2902: 2898: 2895: 2891: 2887: 2883: 2879: 2878: 2877: 2873: 2869: 2865: 2862: 2861: 2856: 2852: 2848: 2847:Percy Snoodle 2844: 2840: 2839: 2838: 2835: 2834: 2829: 2825: 2821: 2820: 2817: 2813: 2809: 2808:Percy Snoodle 2804: 2803: 2802: 2801: 2797: 2793: 2776: 2773: 2769: 2765: 2763: 2759: 2755: 2754:Percy Snoodle 2751: 2747: 2743: 2742: 2741: 2738: 2727: 2719: 2715: 2711: 2707: 2706:Percy Snoodle 2702: 2701: 2698: 2697: 2696: 2692: 2688: 2687:Percy Snoodle 2684: 2683: 2682: 2679: 2671: 2668: 2665: 2664: 2662: 2657: 2654: 2651: 2647: 2644: 2640: 2637: 2636: 2634: 2633: 2632: 2631: 2630: 2629: 2626: 2614: 2609: 2606: 2603: 2600: 2599: 2597: 2592: 2589: 2586: 2585: 2583: 2579: 2578: 2577: 2571: 2563: 2559: 2555: 2554:Percy Snoodle 2551: 2547: 2546: 2545: 2544: 2541: 2537: 2533: 2532:Gavin Collins 2529: 2525: 2520: 2516: 2512: 2507: 2503: 2499: 2495: 2494: 2493: 2492: 2491: 2490: 2486: 2482: 2481:Percy Snoodle 2466: 2462: 2458: 2457:Gavin Collins 2454: 2450: 2446: 2441: 2440: 2439: 2438: 2435: 2432: 2424: 2423: 2422: 2421: 2418: 2414: 2410: 2409:Gavin Collins 2406: 2401: 2397: 2396: 2395: 2394: 2391: 2388: 2380: 2379: 2378: 2377: 2374: 2370: 2366: 2365:Gavin Collins 2361: 2357: 2353: 2350: 2349: 2348: 2347: 2343: 2339: 2338:Percy Snoodle 2330: 2314: 2310: 2306: 2305:Percy Snoodle 2302: 2301: 2300: 2296: 2292: 2288: 2283: 2282: 2281: 2277: 2273: 2272:Percy Snoodle 2268: 2267: 2266: 2263: 2256: 2252: 2248: 2244: 2243:Percy Snoodle 2239: 2238: 2235: 2230: 2229: 2228: 2224: 2220: 2219:Percy Snoodle 2215: 2214: 2213: 2209: 2205: 2204: 2199: 2195: 2192: 2187: 2185: 2176: 2175: 2174: 2170: 2166: 2162: 2158: 2157: 2156: 2153: 2148: 2146: 2138: 2134: 2133: 2118: 2114: 2110: 2109:Percy Snoodle 2106: 2105: 2104: 2100: 2096: 2091: 2087: 2083: 2079: 2078:Percy Snoodle 2075: 2070: 2069: 2066: 2062: 2058: 2054: 2053:Percy Snoodle 2049: 2048: 2046: 2042: 2037: 2033: 2029: 2025: 2021: 2020:Percy Snoodle 2016: 2015: 2012: 2010: 2006: 2002: 2001:Percy Snoodle 1998: 1994: 1989: 1988: 1987: 1983: 1979: 1974: 1973: 1972: 1968: 1964: 1959: 1955: 1954: 1953: 1950: 1942: 1941:featured list 1938: 1934: 1933: 1932: 1928: 1924: 1920: 1916: 1915: 1914: 1910: 1906: 1905:Percy Snoodle 1901: 1900: 1899: 1898: 1895: 1886: 1885: 1881: 1877: 1876:Percy Snoodle 1871: 1870: 1866: 1862: 1858: 1854: 1850: 1845: 1830: 1826: 1822: 1821:Percy Snoodle 1817: 1814:...whereas I 1813: 1812: 1811: 1807: 1803: 1799: 1795: 1791: 1787: 1783: 1779: 1775: 1774:Percy Snoodle 1770: 1769: 1766: 1762: 1758: 1754: 1750: 1749: 1748: 1744: 1740: 1739:Percy Snoodle 1736: 1732: 1731: 1729: 1726: 1721: 1717: 1712: 1709: 1708: 1707: 1706: 1695: 1691: 1687: 1686:Percy Snoodle 1682: 1681: 1680: 1676: 1672: 1668: 1663: 1662: 1661: 1657: 1653: 1652:Percy Snoodle 1648: 1647: 1645: 1643: 1637: 1632: 1628: 1623: 1620: 1619: 1618: 1617: 1606: 1602: 1598: 1597:Percy Snoodle 1594: 1593: 1592: 1588: 1584: 1580: 1575: 1571: 1570: 1569: 1565: 1561: 1560:Percy Snoodle 1557: 1556: 1554: 1550: 1548: 1544: 1539: 1536: 1535: 1534: 1533: 1524: 1520: 1516: 1512: 1508: 1507: 1506: 1502: 1498: 1497:Percy Snoodle 1493: 1492: 1490: 1487: 1484: 1483: 1482: 1481: 1477: 1476: 1472: 1470: 1469: 1466: 1465: 1460: 1459:verifiability 1456: 1452: 1448: 1433: 1429: 1425: 1421: 1417: 1416: 1415: 1411: 1407: 1402: 1398: 1394: 1390: 1386: 1382: 1378: 1374: 1369: 1365: 1364: 1363: 1362: 1361: 1360: 1359: 1358: 1353: 1349: 1345: 1344:Percy Snoodle 1340: 1339: 1338: 1334: 1330: 1325: 1320: 1316: 1312: 1308: 1304: 1303:Percy Snoodle 1300: 1299: 1298: 1295: 1288: 1284: 1280: 1276: 1272: 1268: 1267:Percy Snoodle 1263: 1262: 1261: 1257: 1253: 1244: 1239: 1235: 1231: 1227: 1223: 1219: 1215: 1211: 1207: 1203: 1202:comprehensive 1199: 1194: 1190: 1186: 1182: 1181: 1180: 1176: 1172: 1171:Gavin Collins 1167: 1163: 1159: 1155: 1152:comprised of 1151: 1147: 1146:Percy Snoodle 1144: 1140: 1136: 1132: 1128: 1124: 1120: 1119: 1118: 1113: 1112:Seraphimblade 1109: 1105: 1101: 1097: 1093: 1089: 1088: 1083: 1079: 1075: 1074:Percy Snoodle 1070: 1069: 1068: 1067: 1066: 1065: 1061: 1057: 1056:Percy Snoodle 1053: 1044: 1040: 1037: 1033: 1029: 1026: 1022: 1019: 1016: 1011: 1008: 1007: 1006: 1004: 1000: 996: 992: 983: 979: 975: 972: 968: 965: 962: 959: 956: 952: 949: 945: 941: 938: 937: 936: 935: 931: 927: 923: 919: 914: 910: 902: 896: 892: 888: 887:Percy Snoodle 883: 882: 881: 877: 873: 869: 865: 861: 853: 849: 845: 844:Percy Snoodle 841: 836: 832: 831: 830: 827: 819: 818: 817: 813: 809: 808:Percy Snoodle 805: 804: 802: 798: 794: 790: 786: 785:Percy Snoodle 782: 778: 774: 773: 771: 767: 762: 758: 751: 744: 743: 742: 741: 737: 733: 727: 725: 724:template:main 720: 718: 709: 677: 673: 669: 668:Percy Snoodle 665: 664: 663: 659: 655: 650: 649: 644: 643: 642: 638: 634: 633:Percy Snoodle 630: 626: 625: 624: 620: 616: 611: 610: 609: 605: 601: 600:Percy Snoodle 597: 596: 595: 591: 587: 583: 579: 575: 574: 573: 569: 565: 564:Percy Snoodle 561: 560: 559: 555: 551: 547: 543: 539: 538: 537: 533: 529: 528:Percy Snoodle 525: 521: 520: 519: 518: 517: 513: 509: 504: 499: 498: 497: 496: 495: 494: 493: 492: 491: 490: 481: 477: 473: 469: 465: 462: 461: 460: 459: 458: 457: 456: 455: 454: 433: 429: 425: 424:Percy Snoodle 421: 417: 413: 409: 408: 407: 403: 399: 395: 391: 387: 383: 379: 375: 374: 373: 369: 365: 364:Percy Snoodle 360: 359: 358: 354: 350: 346: 342: 341: 340: 336: 332: 331:Percy Snoodle 328: 324: 323: 322: 318: 314: 310: 306: 302: 298: 297: 296: 295: 294: 293: 292: 291: 284: 280: 276: 272: 268: 267: 266: 265: 264: 263: 258: 254: 250: 246: 245: 244: 243: 240: 236: 232: 227: 226: 221: 217: 213: 212:Percy Snoodle 209: 205: 201: 200: 197: 196: 191: 187: 183: 178: 177: 176: 175: 172: 168: 164: 160: 159: 158: 157: 153: 149: 145: 140: 138: 134: 130: 126: 122: 117: 116: 114: 105: 99: 96: 93: 91: 88: 86: 83: 80: 76: 74: 71: 69: 66: 63: 61: 58: 57: 49: 45: 41: 40: 35: 28: 27: 19: 3444: 3421: 3302: 3297: 3276: 3268: 3262: 3259: 3255: 3243:Geometry guy 3241: 3238: 3184:and ignores 3136:and ignores 3112:plot summary 3097: 3087: 3036:Geometry guy 3034: 3030: 2986: 2965:Geometry guy 2963: 2951: 2938: 2929: 2926: 2918: 2900: 2893: 2885: 2863: 2831: 2827: 2789: 2767: 2649:appropriate" 2618: 2575: 2505: 2477: 2404: 2363:Knowledge.-- 2351: 2334: 2201: 2190:(Contact me) 2181: 2161:Chrono Cross 2151:(Contact me) 2142: 2095:ΖαππερΝαππερ 2073: 2044: 2040: 2035: 1887: 1872: 1861:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1856: 1852: 1848: 1843: 1841: 1815: 1802:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1789: 1760: 1756: 1752: 1734: 1727: 1724: 1719: 1715: 1671:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1641: 1639: 1630: 1626: 1583:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1573: 1546: 1545:section, or 1542: 1540: 1515:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1510: 1488: 1464:Geometry guy 1462: 1454: 1450: 1446: 1444: 1419: 1406:--Craw-daddy 1392: 1384: 1323: 1318: 1286: 1222:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1217: 1213: 1209: 1205: 1201: 1198:five pillars 1184: 1131:ΖαππερΝαππερ 1099: 1095: 1048: 1014: 987: 981: 906: 867: 863: 839: 834: 769: 768:sections of 765: 761:ad infinitum 760: 756: 728: 721: 713: 647: 646: 581: 577: 541: 467: 452: 393: 389: 385: 381: 377: 308: 304: 300: 141: 111: 110: 109: 78: 43: 37: 3414:WP:NOT#PLOT 3376:WP:NOT#PLOT 3252:Break point 3182:WP:NOT#PLOT 3134:WP:NOT#PLOT 2524:WP:NOT#PLOT 2449:WP:NOT#PLOT 2400:WP:NOT#PLOT 2356:WP:NOT#PLOT 1389:Franz Liszt 1243:Franz Liszt 119:—Preceding 36:This is an 3427:Ursasapien 3348:Ursasapien 3120:notability 2099:Alexandria 1865:Alexandria 1855:, but not 1806:Alexandria 1675:Alexandria 1622:WP:SUMMARY 1587:Alexandria 1538:WP:SPINOUT 1519:Alexandria 1381:Bill Gates 1238:Paul Dukas 1226:Alexandria 1169:content.-- 1135:Alexandria 1092:notability 967:WP:SUMMARY 951:WP:SPINOUT 930:WP:SUMMARY 922:WP:SPINOUT 872:Ursasapien 750:Subarticle 732:Richard001 654:Ursasapien 615:Ursasapien 586:Ursasapien 550:Ursasapien 546:WP:SPINOUT 524:WP:SECTION 508:Ursasapien 349:Ursasapien 327:WP:SECTION 275:Ursasapien 231:Ursasapien 163:Ursasapien 98:Archive 30 90:Archive 26 85:Archive 25 79:Archive 24 73:Archive 23 68:Archive 22 60:Archive 20 3418:MalikCarr 3104:synthesis 3073:synthesis 2979:entirely: 2949:article. 2360:synthesis 1457:of their 1327:sense... 1024:coverage. 1015:something 757:See also: 717:who does? 542:carefully 305:substance 3380:WP:SYNTH 3280:erachima 3031:a priori 2996:content. 2826:(on DYK 2772:sgeureka 2528:WP:SYNTH 2183:BIGNOLE 2144:BIGNOLE 1849:articles 1844:unwanted 1728:policies 1716:anything 1711:WP:PAPER 1627:articles 1547:unwanted 1543:unwanted 1368:WP:LISTS 1123:Universe 1104:universe 1028:WP:IINFO 999:WP:IINFO 974:WP:PAPER 934:WP:PAPER 907:Over at 801:who has? 648:spin-out 629:be civil 420:WP:IINFO 386:location 133:contribs 121:unsigned 3263:limited 3261:that a 2894:concise 2864:Comment 2833:Sceptre 2750:WP:SPIN 2726:seealso 2137:WP:PLOT 2045:nothing 2041:so many 1993:WP:PLOT 1857:content 1725:content 1631:article 1553:WP:SIZE 1451:doesn't 1377:Dilbert 1210:neutral 961:WP:SIZE 955:WP:SIZE 926:WP:SIZE 866:. The 781:WP:PLOT 582:EXACTLY 472:Low Sea 398:Low Sea 382:heading 345:Low Sea 313:Low Sea 271:WP:SIZE 249:Low Sea 182:Low Sea 148:Low Sea 125:Low Sea 39:archive 3431:(talk) 3352:(talk) 3272:WP:IAR 3270:where 3157:WP:SYN 2843:WP:NNC 2519:WP:WAF 2506:appear 2453:WP:WAF 2234:WP:WAF 2217:'it'. 2036:strive 1937:WP:NOT 1853:topics 1759:says " 1667:WP:NNC 1486:WP:NNC 1420:highly 1043:WP:ATA 1032:WP:NOT 978:WP:NOT 940:WP:NNC 918:WP:NNC 876:(talk) 840:always 658:(talk) 619:(talk) 590:(talk) 554:(talk) 512:(talk) 353:(talk) 279:(talk) 235:(talk) 167:(talk) 3298:group 3186:WP:RS 3173:WP:RS 3138:WP:RS 3102:or a 3017:SamBC 1765:Pichu 1757:IINFO 1424:Hobit 1393:could 1385:could 1329:SamBC 1189:Pichu 1127:Earth 1108:Earth 868:topic 864:topic 803:). 710:Break 544:read 390:shape 303:with 16:< 3453:talk 3445:some 3412:and 3410:WP:N 3396:talk 3388:WP:V 3386:and 3384:WP:N 3378:and 3366:talk 3337:talk 3323:talk 3309:talk 3222:talk 3207:ASEM 3194:talk 3188:. -- 3178:WP:N 3163:ASEM 3146:talk 3130:WP:N 3053:ASEM 3021:talk 3006:talk 2942:WP:N 2934:WP:N 2932:per 2908:ASEM 2872:talk 2851:talk 2812:talk 2796:talk 2768:main 2758:talk 2736:ASEM 2710:talk 2691:talk 2677:ASEM 2624:ASEM 2558:talk 2536:talk 2530:. -- 2526:and 2511:WP:N 2485:talk 2461:talk 2430:ASEM 2413:talk 2386:ASEM 2369:talk 2342:talk 2309:talk 2295:talk 2276:talk 2261:ASEM 2247:talk 2223:talk 2208:talk 2169:talk 2113:talk 2082:talk 2057:talk 2024:talk 2005:talk 1997:WP:N 1982:talk 1967:talk 1948:ASEM 1927:talk 1919:WP:V 1909:talk 1893:ASEM 1880:talk 1851:and 1825:talk 1778:talk 1753:must 1743:talk 1690:talk 1656:talk 1642:text 1601:talk 1564:talk 1501:talk 1455:some 1428:talk 1401:Dogs 1348:talk 1333:talk 1319:some 1307:talk 1293:ASEM 1271:talk 1256:talk 1214:free 1185:some 1175:talk 1156:and 1106:and 1094:for 1078:talk 1060:talk 1052:WP:N 1021:WP:V 1010:WP:N 1001:and 995:WP:V 991:WP:N 944:WP:N 932:and 891:talk 848:talk 825:ASEM 812:talk 789:talk 736:talk 672:talk 637:talk 604:talk 580:" - 568:talk 532:talk 476:talk 428:talk 416:WP:N 402:talk 394:this 388:and 378:part 368:talk 335:talk 317:talk 301:form 253:talk 216:talk 186:talk 152:talk 129:talk 3425:" 3420:, " 3304:DGG 2886:are 2828:now 2203:DGG 1859:. - 1800:. - 1790:any 1574:not 1511:was 1375:. 1218:and 1208:), 1158:POV 1125:or 835:all 770:all 766:all 3455:) 3398:) 3368:) 3339:) 3325:) 3311:) 3224:) 3196:) 3180:, 3148:) 3132:, 3122:." 3023:) 3008:) 2936:. 2874:) 2853:) 2845:. 2814:) 2798:) 2760:) 2729:}} 2723:{{ 2712:) 2693:) 2620:-- 2560:) 2538:) 2500:, 2487:) 2463:) 2415:) 2407:-- 2371:) 2344:) 2311:) 2297:) 2278:) 2249:) 2225:) 2210:) 2171:) 2115:) 2084:) 2059:) 2026:) 2007:) 1984:) 1969:) 1929:) 1911:) 1882:) 1827:) 1816:do 1780:) 1745:) 1692:) 1658:) 1603:) 1566:) 1503:) 1430:) 1412:| 1408:| 1350:) 1335:) 1324:or 1309:) 1273:) 1258:) 1177:) 1154:OR 1080:) 1062:) 1005:. 997:, 993:, 924:, 920:, 911:, 893:) 850:) 814:) 791:) 777:no 753:}} 747:{{ 738:) 674:) 639:) 606:) 570:) 534:) 526:. 478:) 470:. 430:) 404:) 370:) 337:) 329:. 319:) 255:) 218:) 188:) 154:) 135:) 131:• 94:→ 64:← 3451:( 3394:( 3364:( 3335:( 3321:( 3307:( 3220:( 3205:M 3192:( 3161:M 3144:( 3051:M 3019:( 3004:( 2906:M 2901:a 2870:( 2849:( 2810:( 2794:( 2756:( 2748:( 2734:M 2708:( 2689:( 2675:M 2622:M 2556:( 2534:( 2483:( 2459:( 2428:M 2411:( 2384:M 2367:( 2340:( 2307:( 2293:( 2274:( 2259:M 2245:( 2221:( 2206:( 2167:( 2111:( 2080:( 2055:( 2022:( 2003:( 1980:( 1965:( 1946:M 1925:( 1907:( 1891:M 1878:( 1823:( 1776:( 1741:( 1733:" 1688:( 1654:( 1599:( 1562:( 1499:( 1445:" 1426:( 1410:T 1346:( 1331:( 1305:( 1291:M 1269:( 1254:( 1204:( 1173:( 1076:( 1058:( 928:, 889:( 846:( 823:M 810:( 787:( 734:( 670:( 635:( 602:( 566:( 530:( 474:( 426:( 400:( 366:( 333:( 315:( 251:( 214:( 184:( 150:( 127:( 115:. 50:.

Index

Knowledge talk:Notability (fiction)
archive
current talk page
Archive 20
Archive 22
Archive 23
Archive 24
Archive 25
Archive 26
Archive 30

unsigned
Low Sea
talk
contribs
10:59, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
Template talk:Subarticle
Low Sea
talk
09:14, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
Ursasapien
(talk)
09:19, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
Low Sea
talk
09:28, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
List of characters in Star Wars
Elan Sleazebaggano
Percy Snoodle
talk

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.