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Hello! I just saw that you did a little copyediting on my edit in Sarcomyxa edulis entry, thank you. I appreciate it. I look forward to your continued interest in my sharing, and help improve it. When necessary, please leave a message on my User talk. Thank you so much! Ping an Chang (talk) 09:46, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
I have a problem with your edits.Infactinteresting (talk) 17:51, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
Hello. I've run into the editor "Bon courage" and discovered his/her insistence on maintaining the word "fringe" in the article about Jay Bhattacharya. Is there some kind of territoriality at work here where this editor is trying to claim certain content as their own, so they can espouse their viewpoints? What's the history? (I see you tried to remove "fringe" from the article about two years ago.) BleedingKansas (talk) 00:22, 6 March 2023 (UTC)
Hi Eric, I prefer not to template the regulars, but please stop edit warring at Great Barrington Declaration. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 04:49, 6 March 2023 (UTC)
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Thank you for your humorous anecdote. I found it to be both careful and constructive. I especially appreciated the use of the passive voice. Eric talk 05:07, 6 March 2023 (UTC)
I appreciated your input on the Vienne article concerning "Cardinal of Tournon" and the valley of the river Gère. The second doesn't sound bad to me because I'm used to hearing insular English, but I'd prefer to use the less marked international form (Gère river valley). As for Cardinal of Tournon, while it may be used in English (which I didn't know, but see is true), I've decided to use his full name because he was Archbishop of Lyon at the time of the condemnation of Servet and I don't want to confuse matters. I do appreciate the input though. -- SashiRolls 🌿 · 🍥 22:14, 25 August 2023 (UTC)
Hi Eric, you reverted my edit on Dane Axe, presumably because you consider it to be incorrect or, perhaps, a hyper-correction.
The issue is that "thin" is an adjective but "forged" is a verb (past-tense). Adjectives are used to describe (or define) nouns. However, adverbs should be used when describing (or modifying) verbs. Thus "forged thinly" is correct while "forged thin" is not.
It's exactly the same rule by which "the car moved really quickly" is correct but "the car moved real quick" is most definitely not.
The edit is not controversial so I will put it back.
Best Regards, 220.235.82.123 (talk) 03:44, 26 September 2023 (UTC)
You reverted my edit on the article Auvergne on the ground of WP:OVERLINK. I looked at the article and saw that there was not a single wikilink to the article France anywhere in the article. I thought the reader would be interested in looking at the article about the country where Auvergne is. JIP | Talk 08:02, 19 December 2023 (UTC)
Can you please further explain your edits here[1] and [2]? "not an improvement" is a very strange revert for a good faith, high quality photograph contribution to further expound on food subjects, which are pretty dreadful on English Wikipedia. It's important to show food and how it is presented in other countries outside of it's "native" country (such as France in this matter with cassoulet) and there is no photograph depicting a Jerusalem artichoke, therefore it is very important for us to have. I'll likely add that one back here in a moment, since it is educational in value and important for readers to see how one can use that vegetable per Wikipedia:Image_use_policy#Adding_images_to_articles.
I also notice you nominated one of my photos on Commons. Not sure why you're suddenly choosing to mess with my contributions. Thanks and Happy New Year. Missvain (talk) 05:06, 1 January 2024 (UTC)
Hi Eric, regarding your recent revert [[3]] at Black-capped chickadee, I first want to say thank you for correcting my wording of the image caption - it's definitely an improvement. I do still think that license plate should be used over registration plate. While the site you link actually has both registration and license plate named, license plate is the common term throughout North America where this bird lives.
Vehicle license plates of the United States
Vehicle registration plate - "license plate (US English)"
Your last revert left the article with a mismatch - "license" appears in the text, "registration" appears in the image caption. I'm planning to do more edits to this article to get it ready for GA review, and ultimately I don't care which term is used, but I'd at least like to have it consistent and avoid an edit war. Unless there's good evidence why this shouldn't be the case, I'll eventually change it back to license through my edits.
Thanks! grungaloo (talk) 02:04, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
im sorry im sorry im sorry im sorry, to my mother im sorry im sorry im sorry im sorry. Shlomper2 (talk) 18:38, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
Hi Eric, as I have explained in the edit notes, phrases such as "one of # NOUNS", "one" is a pronoun for "one NOUN of # NOUNS". What you have reverted to is a common mistake of thinking "two regions" is the clause" because you see two next to regions, and think it should take a plural form verb. Are you familiar with the term propositional phrase? "of two" is a propositional phrase which can always be omitted for the sentence to still contain the main meaning and make sense. If you remove "of two regions", (its an alternate form of "one region (out)of two"), then you see the sentence becomes "one region that does...". Then you can see the subject is "one (region)". Please refer to the below link for thr grammar explanation and example. I'd appreciate that after you read it and understand it, to please revert your revert. thanks. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/256479/one-out-of-three-people-thinks-or-one-out-of-three-people-think Mistakefinder (talk) 18:06, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
The Hard Worker's Barnstar | |
For your continued help on Black-capped chickadee - thank you for catching and correcting my mistakes! grungaloo (talk) 00:15, 30 January 2024 (UTC) |
Please keep it coming! grungaloo (talk) 00:15, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
There is currently a discussion at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. Thank you.TSventon (talk) 01:41, 3 February 2024 (UTC)
"The user is deleting my edits with invalid reasons. I really do a lot of research, I consult the English language vocabulary "Collins Dictionary" (https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english), I make 100%, or almost 100%, accurate edits, and a user who doesn't know the rules well (he wrote "Parmesan" with a lowercase initial ("parmesan"), removed useful wikilinks (such as the wikilink "Italy" in the infobox), and, not happy, deleted italics from uncommon English language terms, such as "tortelloni"). I request a temporary block for this user."
This is what I wrote in the closed block request. JackkBrown (talk) 02:00, 3 February 2024 (UTC)
{{lang|it|...}}
or whatever is the appropriate language code, which italicizes and also does language markup) throughout, we also put {{Italic title}}
at the top of the article. But not if it's a fully-assimilated-into-English term like "pizza". If that meant something more like "This particular term is not italicized throughout this particular article, so I object to your italicizing it in this particular spot", then it's a matter for seeing whether a preponderance of mainstream English-language dictionaries treat it as an assimilated term and have an entry on it, as they will for "pizza" but surely not for pizzoccheri. If it's something that should be italicized as a non-assimilated foreignism per MOS:FOREIGN, then it should be done consistently throughout the article (and at other articles that mention it). Not sure why there is this level disputation, since it's a pretty simple matter. [shrug] — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼 06:22, 3 February 2024 (UTC)@JackkBrown: The fact that it took you seven edits over eleven minutes (all without edit summaries) to express your feelings here might serve as an indication of how your edits might come across to other editors as being chaotic, not well thought-out, and disruptive.
@SMcCandlish: I would not italicize a foreign-language article subject term in that manner. Repeatedly italicizing the term that is the subject of the article is distracting, and unnecessarily so, one reason being that the reader already knows the article is about that term, and that it comes from a foreign language. When leaving edit summaries for the reverts I made, I looked for guidance, including at MOS:FOREIGN, MOS:LEADLANG, and MOS:FOREIGNITALIC, and did not find any that treated this situation. It seems to me that such guidance is lacking. If I were involved in helping formulate it, I would suggest treating such terms as we do foreign-language proper names (with respect to italicization), as is mentioned mid-section at MOS:FOREIGNITALIC. Eric talk 13:18, 3 February 2024 (UTC)
Use italics for phrases in other languages and for isolated foreign words that are not current in English .... Where possible, this is best done with the {{lang}}
template
. MOS:FOREIGNITALIC in more detail: Wikipedia uses italics for phrases in other languages and for isolated foreign words that do not yet have everyday use in non-specialized English. Use the native spellings if they use the Latin alphabet (with or without diacritics) .... The {{lang}}
template and its variants support all ISO 639 language codes, correctly identifying the language and automatically italicizing for you. Please use these templates rather than manually italicizing non-English material. .... Loanwords or phrases that have been assimilated into and have common use in English, such as praetor, Gestapo, samurai, esprit de corps, e.g., i.e., etc., do not require italicization.
MOS:LEADLANG generally isn't relevant here; it's about when there is a native English name and a non-English name for the same thing, and some material on proper names, and on not cluttering the lead with irrelevant additonal language stuff. MOS:OTHERLANG: Non-English words or phrases should be encased inWP:ITALICTITLE:{{lang}}
, which uses ISO 639 language codes .... Rationale:{{lang}}
enables speech synthesizers to pronounce the text in the correct language. It has many other uses; see Template:Lang/doc#Rationale for a comprehensive list of benefits.
Use italics [in the page title] when italics would be necessary in running text; for example ... foreign phrases are italicized both in ordinary text and in article titles. ... A title or part of it is made to appear in italics with the use of the DISPLAYTITLE magic word or the {{Italic title}}
template.
. So, what part of this needs revision? None of this is new; it all dates to 2010 and earlier. A typical compliant article: chicharrón.We would not treat such foreign terms the same as foreign proper names, since they are not proper names. If we did, then these guidelines (plus part of AT policy) of course would not exist. Also, why would we treat non-English common nouns and other generic terms as if they were proper names, when we do not treat English-language ones as if they are proper names (e.g. by capializing them like "Dog", "Hermeneutics", "Computer", "Swimming", etc.)? PS: Actual compliance with this is still spotty, because it's tedious and takes a lot of WP:GNOME work (like so) that most editors aren't interested in doing. E.g. a whole lot of {{lang|es}}
needs to happen at many articles on Latin American cuisine. Anyway, the important thing is to not interfere with this cleanup work, which serves accessibility and other purposes, even if you don't want to participate in it (and even if someone like JackkBrown sometimes overdoes it – despite a lot of help, he often seems unclear what is an assimilated loanword like "pizza" versus an unassimilated foreignism like pizzoccheri).
PPS, after edit conflict: If you really wanted to propose we switch to a system of italicizing foreignisms only one time per article, you could make such a proposal at WT:MOS, but I do not think it would meet with success, in part because it would be inconsistent, in part because where a particular piece of text is in the article can change radically at any moment, and the actual markup to do it (e.g. {{lang|it|pizzoccheri|italic=unset}}
) is more complicated, but would still be needed to prevent screen readers from mangling pronunciations. Readers understand that a foreign term put in italics is italicized as a foreignism; it's simply a convention, which has existed for centuries before WP, and does not represent a form of emphasis. In this, it is just like italicizing movie and book titles, and scientific names of species, and various other purely typographic, non-emphasis uses of italics. — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼 14:22, 3 February 2024 (UTC)
In amateur and/or self-published writing, like individuals' blogs, and Scottish clan society newsletters, and Spanish teachers' web-posted lesson plans, and so on, the italics are fairly often dropped (though sometimes replaced by quotation marks, underlining, or other markup). When I lived in New Mexico, the local English of which has absorbed much more Spanish vocabulary than would be the case in, say, Wisconsin or Lankashire or Western Autralia, Spanish terms were less often italicized in newspapers and magazines than they would have been somewhere else. To return to the cuisine theme, cookbooks (mostly produced by amateur writers and subject to editorial revision by the publisher only rarely) often drop all italics, even for terms almost entirely unknown outside of a small area in a minority language. I'm skeptical there's a Wikipedian appetite (pun intended) for handling MOS:FOREIGN stuff differently on a category-by-category basis (e.g. dropping italics for all cuisine terminology). Terms that are firmly assimiliated in a particular dialect of English do seem to drop the italics in WP, probably owing to articles generally being written in the English that most pertains to the topic, and usage spreading from the main articles on the subjects in question. So "crore" and "lakh" usually don't take italics despite being virtually unknown outside of Indian and closely related Englishes, and (back to food) "chile", meaning New Mexico chile in particular, isn't italicized as Spanish despite the spelling being "chili" in every other English dialect (or, outside North America, sometimes "chilli").
@JackkBrown: "I have consumed a lot of my time on this" – I'm going to suggest for about the dozenth time that "policing" italics usage with regard to terms with varying absorption levels into English is a very poor choice of activity for a non-native speaker of the language. It is guaranteed to lead to a high error rate and to conflict with other editors. It would be of vastly higher value to the project, to the readers, and to your own peace of mind, for you to identify topics that are notable and on which it.wikipedia has a good article but en.wikipedia does not (or has a crappy stub), and do translation work and porting over of reliable-source citations (plus do some translation in the en→it direction). When we need a house built, it involves a lot more hauling of lumber and hammering of nails than polishing of doorknobs. — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼 22:43, 3 February 2024 (UTC)
An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Monsieur Spade, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page AMC.
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Hello, Eric. I would like to inquire about avg file regulations. First, in the discussion of users who convert signature files to svg files like me, it was said that it would be better to use the signatures of historical figures written on actual parchment of paper. So what is the era standard for this historical figure? For example, the use of svg files in the signature file of Hugh Capet document is prohibited, but the signature file of the contemporary Stephen I of Hungary document is an svg file, but it has been used as a signature file a very long time. Second, the transparent png signature file, such as Carol I of Romania and Alexandru Ioan Cuza, loses the advantage of being able to get closerr to history than the actual parchment or paper signature file mentioned in other users' discussions, and at the same time, the image quality is not good. Tveol1091 (talk) 23:57, 25 February 2024 (UTC)
Your recent editing history at Denis Rancourt shows that you are currently engaged in an edit war; that means that you are repeatedly changing content back to how you think it should be, when you have seen that other editors disagree. To resolve the content dispute, please do not revert or change the edits of others when you are reverted. Instead of reverting, please use the talk page to work toward making a version that represents consensus among editors. The best practice at this stage is to discuss, not edit-war; read about how this is done. If discussions reach an impasse, you can then post a request for help at a relevant noticeboard or seek dispute resolution. In some cases, you may wish to request temporary page protection.
Being involved in an edit war can result in you being blocked from editing—especially if you violate the three-revert rule, which states that an editor must not perform more than three reverts on a single page within a 24-hour period. Undoing another editor's work—whether in whole or in part, whether involving the same or different material each time—counts as a revert. Also keep in mind that while violating the three-revert rule often leads to a block, you can still be blocked for edit warring—even if you do not violate the three-revert rule—should your behavior indicate that you intend to continue reverting repeatedly. 208.87.236.202 (talk) 18:53, 20 March 2024 (UTC)
Dear Eric, please stop deleting requests on Winston Marshall's talk page to add information on his far-right political agitation.
It is an important aspect of his life and career that is completely absent from his page which concentrates heavily on his former career as a banjoist.
Thank you.109.175.106.21 (talk) 10:36, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pizzoccheri&diff=prev&oldid=1224692376: does it apply to all types of Italian pasta? In this case, I have to correct several pages. JacktheBrown (talk) 22:33, 1 June 2024 (UTC)
The problem is that sometimes the page does not update with changes. No problem. 2A02:B121:F01:CC2F:AD6A:4D74:6397:4D1B (talk) 13:32, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
I've started a discussion about including an English map key on the talk page of the article. Darrelljon (talk) 22:39, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
On 28 July 2024, In the news was updated with an item that involved the article Alexander Waugh, which you nominated and updated. If you know of another recently created or updated article suitable for inclusion in ITN, please suggest it on the candidates page. PFHLai (talk) 02:34, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
Quick question regarding your revert of my edit (addition of a Wiktionary link to the word "tutelage" on Louis IV of France's page):
The word in question was used in a context in which (to my admittedly non-all-encompassing knowledge) it is no longer used; i.e. the medieval concept of tutelage of nobility. I had not heard of this concept before (or at least the word tutelage being used to refer to a sort of guardianship, and in this case seemingly of a protective or incarceratory sort), so I inferred (unwisely?) that it was an outdated and obsolete usage of the term, and decided to attempt to provide clarity to others who might find themselves in a predicament similar to mine. I realise that the general public is unlikely to find themselves on the Wikipedia page of a medieval French royal, that is to say, many who will find themselves on any given semi-obscure Wikipedia page (not just the aforementioned) will likely be familiar with the subject of said page, however it seems Wikipedia and I are at odds where streamlining and encouraging inquisitiveness is concerned (I am often rebuked for "over-linking"), and therefore I was in the wrong.
Am I correct in this assumption? Am I correct for the wrong reasons? Am I full of it? Please feel free to let me know on the next episode of DragonBall Z!
tl;dr can someone please tell me why more information/clarity/options/links/etc are bad because to me it seems counterintuitive to Wikipedia's mission (to educate) and that there's either a seemingly nebulous and vague line I keep crossing without knowing or this is just a symptom of the nature of the site in that Wikipedia is inconsistent and that's the way it is lol help me out here I didn't get the memo mmkay thaaanks - Bill Lumbergh (talk) 01:29, 27 August 2024 (UTC)
Posting a link here in case Hemiauchenia is ever looking for more guidance on the proper use of edit summaries: Help:Edit_summary#What_to_avoid_in_edit_summaries. Happy reading. Eric talk 14:14, 31 August 2024 (UTC)
Hi!
Could you please explain this revert to me? It certainly seemed to me that a comma was needed.
Thank you, 82.52.82.104 (talk) 15:37, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
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An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Tulle, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Edward Fox.
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Thank you for converting my footnote to note b. I have a suggestion, but I lack the skills to implement it. In note b, I would make the citation after the quotation a footnote. I was unable to do so. I looked at [edit source] for note a and saw that it is formatted differently from note b. Perhaps changing the format of note b to that of note a would solve the problem. Of course, this is not really a problem; the way you did it will suffice. Maurice Magnus (talk) 11:36, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Please note also that, if you click on [edit source] next to Notes, note a is there but note b is not. Maurice Magnus (talk) 11:40, 22 December 2024 (UTC)