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* '''[[User talk:Internoob/Archive|Archive]]'''


== Question ==
== law ==


Hi Internoob--
Hi there Internoob. Do you know of any good websites that I can use to help me learn Haitian Creole? Thanks, [[User:Razorflame|<b style="color:#00C">Raz</b><b style="color:#009">or</b>]][[User talk:Razorflame|<b style="color:#006">fl</b><b style="color:#003">am</b><b style="color:#000">e</b>]] 01:10, 14 January 2010 (UTC)
:The way I learned was by reading [[w:Haitian Creole language]] on Wikipedia, and then trying to read the [[w:ht:Paj prensipal|Haitian Creole Wikipedia]], but I was able to progress so quickly because I already knew French, and a lot of the lexicon is the same or similar. There is also [http://books.google.ca/books?id=v9fBdbW6QF0C&pg=PA187&dq=Ayiti&cd=2#v=onepage&q=&f=false ''Guide to Learning Haitian Creole''], although I do not know how easy it would be to follow, since Google Books has only a limited preview of it. I've been considering for some time creating something on Wikibooks to do with Haitian Creole, and I think now that I should. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc.]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont.]]) 02:42, 14 January 2010 (UTC)
::Thanks for the help anyways :). I'll try to learn some of this language at a later date :). Cheers, [[User:Razorflame|<b style="color:#00C">Raz</b><b style="color:#009">or</b>]][[User talk:Razorflame|<b style="color:#006">fl</b><b style="color:#003">am</b><b style="color:#000">e</b>]] 02:45, 14 January 2010 (UTC)
:::[[Wikibooks:Haitian Creole]] is up, but so far has little content. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc.]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont.]]) 02:50, 16 January 2010 (UTC)
::::Thanks! I'll take a look at it later :) [[User:Razorflame|<b style="color:#00C">Raz</b><b style="color:#009">or</b>]][[User talk:Razorflame|<b style="color:#006">fl</b><b style="color:#003">am</b><b style="color:#000">e</b>]] 03:21, 16 January 2010 (UTC)


I understand that your substitution of {{temp|scientific}} for my phrasing "In scientific usage" comports better with WT standards, but I think the inclusion of "a [[term of art]]" may be useful to retain somewhere in the definition, to point out that the word [[law]] used in this context has a very specific meaning which is frequently misunderstood or misinterpreted.
== HT wikibook ==


You can see this confusion already in the example given for the questioned definition, ''Newton and Einstein understood the '''law''' of gravitation in very different ways.'' Newton and Einstein did indeed understand the "law" of gravitation in different ways, but the distinction here as understood by most people who are not physicists has much more to do with their respective ''explanatory theories'' of gravitation rather than with the law that ''describes'' the action of gravity. Further, it is not at all widely understood that the "law of gravitation" is not immutably written in stone, but is still now subject to observation and measurement at different scales and at different times in the history of the universe.
Hi Internoob,


Obviously none of all this can go into a simple definition of the word "law" - but this is why I think it's important to specify that "in scientific usage" or in a {{lb|und|sciences}} context, the word ''is'' used as a term of art to distinguish it from looser and more confused meanings. [[User:Milkunderwood|Milkunderwood]] 21:38, 21 November 2011 (UTC)
Thank you for your contribution to the haitian creole language.
:Hi Milkunderwood.
I'll check your content :-)
:Isn't "term of art" already implied by the {{lb|und|sciences}} label? I only understand the term "[[term of art]]" by our entry's definition (essentially "a piece of jargon"), as it's not a word that I typically use, so it could be that I was removing some critical information. The {{lb|und|sciences}} label means that the use is used specifically when talking about sciences, the same way that the {{lb|und|cricket}} sense of [[law]] is used in reference to cricket. My line of reasoning when I trimmed the definition was that it would be awkward to have every definition start with "in ''x'' usage, '''''term''''' is a term of art, meaning ...". &mdash;'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' 01:05, 22 November 2011 (UTC)
You can use these useful links to help :
::Granting your reversion of "in scientific usage" in favor of {{lb|und|sciences}}, I think not really for [[term of art]]. I understand your thinking that it's redundant, as it would be in reference to cricket, but the problem is that all of this {{lb|und|sciences}} terminology is used both strictly and loosely by scientists, depending on context. So they would tend to assume that a colleague will understand from context how to interpret their use of the word "law" or for instance "theory", which lends itself to even far greater misunderstanding - but a layman will need to have that distinction made clear.


::My hope was that providing a linked reference to ''A term whose use or meaning is specific to a particular field of endeavor'' tends to make the reader think, "wait a minute, am I really understanding how this word was intended?"
*[[w:ht:Lengwistik_kreyòl_ayisyen]]('''ht''')
*[[w:ht:Aprann_pale_kreyòl_ayisyen]]('''en''')


::If you look at the entry for [[theory]], which I tried to similarly clarify at the same time I was posting to [[law]], you'll see that I was quickly reverted by Widsith, I assume primarily because my "quotation" was obviously illegal. There's some discussion at [[User talk:Widsith#theory]] that may better explain what I was trying to get at; and the very long "quotation" I had provided there should still be in the History tab for [[theory]].
[[w:ht:user:masterches]]


::I was just trying to improve and clarify a couple of definitions of terms that particularly lend themselves to great confusion between their stricter and looser senses, and I agree that I was not doing a very good job of it. If nothing else, as I pointed out in my initial post here, the original quotation given at what is the 5th definition of [[law]] is terribly misleading. My edits had first been reverted by [[User:DCDuring]], and there's some discussion (in both of the last two sections #s 216 & 215) on that talkpage that may be of interest. It might also be helpful to look at the huge "quotation" that was reverted - I've never seen a more cogent explanation of the problem with these terms, and perhaps something of use can still be distilled from it.
:Thank you. I've corrected your links, if you don't mind. They led to the wrong wiki. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc.]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont.]]) 04:07, 17 January 2010 (UTC)


::In the meantime, I can't imagine how "law" can refer to the 4th definition as "a one-sided contract" - I've never seen anything to that effect in another English dictionary, and wouldn't know how to interpret this other than "if the law says something I don't like, and is enforceable, then it is per se a one-sided contract between me and the state (or whoever)." So I still am under the impression that my contributions were potentially more helpful than not, even if they weren't done very well. [[User:Milkunderwood|Milkunderwood]] 03:29, 22 November 2011 (UTC)
I'm really happy that this page finally got made, but I'm very curious as to how you're going to aproach the language. Let's not forget that practically every creole word has 2 different spellings. For example, the word for I or me can be written as "mwen" or "mouin". Bread can be written as: "pen" or "pin". While the actual sound the words produce don't change; you can see the difference in spelling and in grammar. I'm not exactly sure on which structure came first, but from my understanding: the language that is being taught to the people is the newer version that has been changed either for english speakers or by english speakers. In which case, the structure of the language itself changes. "Ouè" is changed to "Wè". Even small, insignificant words like "té" and "sé" have been changed to "te" and "se". It is far easier for an english speaker with no foreign language experience to make out the word the word "priye" than it would be to pronounce "prié"; "pote" than "pòté. And since we're talking about grammar; it's important to remember that creole doesn't have any definitive marks when you shorten a pronoun. "M-ap rélé-l";"M'ap rélé'l";"M ap rélé l". You probably already new this stuff and if you do i apologies; i just wanted people to be aware of this. {{unsigned|GenericInk}}


:::Okay, I can see where you're coming from. Maybe a better way to do convey that the term can have strict and loose senses in scientific contexts would be to write {{temp|sciences|strictly}} or some such context tag.
:On the Wikibook, I use the "mwen", "wè" and "se" spelling (detailed [[b:Haitian Creole/Alphabet|here]]) because that is what the majority of people use to write Creole nowadays. It is really a compromise between "English" and "French"; letters like "k", "w" and "y", which are rare in French, could be seen as English influences, whereas "ch", "ou", "è", "an", "on" and "ui" are more French. The use of the letter "e" is unlike both French and English. I use this orthography because, as I said, it is the most common, and other systems are either rare or not phonetic (at least from my experience). Use of hyphens and apostrophes is variable, but I chose to leave them out to be like the Haitian Creole Wikipedia. Does this answer your question? —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 02:03, 6 May 2010 (UTC)
:::Or, alternatively, I recommend using "term of art" in the second sentence of the definition, because otherwise the definition becomes a {{temp|non-gloss definition}} (basically, a term whose definition says what the term ''is'' or what it ''does grammatically'' rather than what it ''means''). Non-gloss definitions aren't bad, they just look kind of confusing, especially when the definition is a non-gloss definition + some notes on usage.
:::I would recommend the former option more highly because the second sentence of the definition might get changed or moved to a usage notes section because the entry is on RFC, and besides it looks cleaner IMO.
:::As to the fourth definition, "one-sided contract", I agree that it seems dubious. The process for getting rid of definitions like those is to put them up on [[WT:RFV]] unless they're obviously rubbish. I don't know why DCDuring restored that fifth definition, TBH. Your edit was only a modification of it. &mdash;'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' 05:51, 23 November 2011 (UTC)
::::It's clear to me that this whole situation is going to require some thoughtful discussion among interested senior editors of Wiktionary, including yourself and perhaps DCDuring and Widsith. And by the way, I had forgotten to mention that I had left just the same sort of mess at the entry for [[hypothesis]]. I'm not at all a competent Wiktionarian (nor a Wikipedian for that matter), and am really just a passerby. It seems to me that the key to the problem lies in the explanatory paragraphs written by Ronald H Pine, but I have no idea how best to distill the distinctions he articulates, or how to present any such distillation in acceptable WT format. Of course Pine's article is not the only possible source for these distinctions - it's just that I'm not aware of any other specific source in mainstream scientific writing that distinguishes the terminology so clearly. Also note that it is not only definitions that will need consideration, but also illustrative quotations can be very misleading, as I had pointed out in the Newton/Einstein example in my original post here. I just hope I may have helped improve the dictionary in some small way by having raised these issues. [[User:Milkunderwood|Milkunderwood]] 07:21, 23 November 2011 (UTC)
:::::Pine doesn't address the term [[proof]], but back many decades ago when I was taught in the sixth grade exactly the same definitions and distinctions made by him, my teacher also pointed out that in a <u>strict</u> sense, ''proof'' cannot be a scientific concept, but only a mathematical one. That is, something can be disproved, but never proven. We were taught to always use "demonstrate" or some other such word instead. In careful mainstream scientific writing you will find this admonition being followed. [[User:Milkunderwood|Milkunderwood]] 08:16, 23 November 2011 (UTC)
::::::Great. I've made [http://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=law&action=historysubmit&diff=15107310&oldid=14999454 this] edit to [[law]] in the absence of anything better. If you want to discuss with others, there are discussions on [[WT:RFD#law]], [[WT:RFV#law]] and [[WT:RFD#law]]. I have limited time and I should probably work on WOTD before we get behind again. I'm sorry for putting this off, but I'll look at the other things you mentioned when I get time. &mdash;'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' 23:47, 23 November 2011 (UTC)
::::::: :-) Internoob, I very much appreciate your patience with me. There can't be any particular hurry to get to the specific problems mentioned here. I had earlier stumbled across a less current version of the [[WT:RFD#law]], and I don't really have anything useful to add to that "discussion". As I've said, I'm just a passerby who thought I might have something of value to contribute to Wiktionary, which the editors here may take or leave at their pleasure - or block me from WT, as the case may be. I will say, however, that being only an occasional editor at Wikipedia, including having made my share or more of mistakes and errors there, I have ''never'' encountered the kind of ugly intolerance and possessive attitudes that appear to be a fixture among a number of senior Wiktionary editors, including, or perhaps especially, [[User:SemperBlotto]], whose talkpage I rummaged through a few days ago. The tone of discourse at Wikipedia is entirely different from here. To date, my impression has been that you're the only welcoming editor I've encountered here, which appears to be reflected in your good choice of wikihandle. [[User:Milkunderwood|Milkunderwood]] 04:01, 24 November 2011 (UTC)
::::::::Yes, the guys at RFD are being tools. This is a persistent problem here. We let them get away with it because they are excellent editors and administrators in every other regard.
::::::::I don't have a fix right now for the Pine quotation. It might get moved to the citations page eventually, and/or replaced with something else, but for the moment, I won't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. &mdash;'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' 21:48, 25 November 2011 (UTC)
:::::::::I haven't looked here for a few days, but I'm very encouraged by your response. Your suggestion of specifying (''strictly'') is probably just as good as mine of [[term of art]], but in either case, {{lb|und|sciences}} alone is misleading and lends itself to argument, since scientists do use all this terminology sloppily as well as in their strict senses. [[User:Milkunderwood|Milkunderwood]] 17:56, 26 November 2011 (UTC)


== GedawyBot ==
I was just a little disappointed to see this spelling of creole since I learned it the other way. It just seems more romantic and closer to french to me. {{unsigned|65.9.42.54}}


Hello, I opened a [[Wiktionary:Votes/bt-2011-11/User:GedawyBot for bot status (2)|voting]] to have bot flag. I hope you particibate. Thanks.--[[User:محمد الجداوي|M.Gedawy]] 19:04, 27 November 2011 (UTC)
:I understand your disappointment. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 23:09, 6 May 2010 (UTC)
:Sorry, don't know which way to vote. &mdash;'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' 00:18, 30 November 2011 (UTC)


== Administrator ==
== [[olympiad]] ==


Re new def: isn't that capitalised at [[Olympiad]]? --[[User:Metaknowledge|Μετάknowledge]]<small><sup>''[[User talk:Metaknowledge|discuss]]/[[Special:Contributions/Metaknowledge|deeds]]''</sup></small> 23:33, 4 August 2012 (UTC)
Oh yes, I would like! Do you really think I'm able to? :) Anyway, many many thanks Internoob, I'm very happy about your proposal! Cheers! [[User:Pharamp|Pharamp]] 11:56, 4 February 2010 (UTC)
:Actually, it seems from a Google Books search that both senses are commonly capitalized. I'll move it. &mdash;'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' 02:20, 6 August 2012 (UTC)

== Louis Viardot, ''L’Ingénieux Hidalgo Don Quichotte de la Manche'' ==

It appears to have been published in 1836/1837 [http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Viardot] [http://books.google.com/books?id=gNkNAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=%22L’Ingénieux+Hidalgo+Don+Quichotte+de+la+Manche%22&cd=6#v=onepage&q=&f=false]. Viardot would have been about 36 or 37 at the time, which also seems about right. --[[User:EncycloPetey|EncycloPetey]] 03:45, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
:Okay, great. Thanks. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 04:13, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

== [[fatidique]] ==

Hey there. Could you make this entry please? Thanks, [[User:Razorflame|<b style="color:#00C">Raz</b><b style="color:#009">or</b>]][[User talk:Razorflame|<b style="color:#006">fl</b><b style="color:#003">am</b><b style="color:#000">e</b>]] 03:49, 14 April 2010 (UTC)
:Seems it was done between the time you posted and the time I logged on. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 01:42, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
:: Coincidence? I think not! —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 02:12, 15 April 2010 (UTC)

== [[agir]] ==

Judging by the Wiktionnaire entry, our entry for this common French verb is lacking six senses, and could use some example sentences with translations. Can you help? I've already done for the entry what I can do without hurting my brain. --[[User:EncycloPetey|EncycloPetey]] 05:28, 17 April 2010 (UTC)

== [[panis]] ==

If the word descends from Portuguese [[pão]], then that is where it should be listed. Borrowed words are listed only on the immediate antecedent, not retroactively on all of them. --[[User:EncycloPetey|EncycloPetey]] 00:32, 29 April 2010 (UTC)
:Hmm. I see. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 01:33, 29 April 2010 (UTC)

== hey ==

hey how do u do wikimood?
thx, [[User:Roxy:Pkid|Roxy:Pkid]] 00:22, 12 May 2010 (UTC)

:I don't know what Wikimood is, sorry. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 00:45, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
::You may want to ask the [[WT:Information desk]]. —'''[[User:Internoob|Internoob]]''' ([[User talk:Internoob|Disc]]•[[Special:Contributions/Internoob|Cont]]) 22:05, 12 May 2010 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 22:35, 25 July 2016

  • Note: This page was moved from User talk:Internoob on 2010-05-19 with the installation of LiquidThreads. You can use this page if you don't want to use LiquidThreads.

law

[edit]

Hi Internoob--

I understand that your substitution of {{scientific}} for my phrasing "In scientific usage" comports better with WT standards, but I think the inclusion of "a term of art" may be useful to retain somewhere in the definition, to point out that the word law used in this context has a very specific meaning which is frequently misunderstood or misinterpreted.

You can see this confusion already in the example given for the questioned definition, Newton and Einstein understood the law of gravitation in very different ways. Newton and Einstein did indeed understand the "law" of gravitation in different ways, but the distinction here as understood by most people who are not physicists has much more to do with their respective explanatory theories of gravitation rather than with the law that describes the action of gravity. Further, it is not at all widely understood that the "law of gravitation" is not immutably written in stone, but is still now subject to observation and measurement at different scales and at different times in the history of the universe.

Obviously none of all this can go into a simple definition of the word "law" - but this is why I think it's important to specify that "in scientific usage" or in a (sciences) context, the word is used as a term of art to distinguish it from looser and more confused meanings. Milkunderwood 21:38, 21 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Hi Milkunderwood.
Isn't "term of art" already implied by the (sciences) label? I only understand the term "term of art" by our entry's definition (essentially "a piece of jargon"), as it's not a word that I typically use, so it could be that I was removing some critical information. The (sciences) label means that the use is used specifically when talking about sciences, the same way that the (cricket) sense of law is used in reference to cricket. My line of reasoning when I trimmed the definition was that it would be awkward to have every definition start with "in x usage, term is a term of art, meaning ...". —Internoob 01:05, 22 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Granting your reversion of "in scientific usage" in favor of (sciences), I think not really for term of art. I understand your thinking that it's redundant, as it would be in reference to cricket, but the problem is that all of this (sciences) terminology is used both strictly and loosely by scientists, depending on context. So they would tend to assume that a colleague will understand from context how to interpret their use of the word "law" or for instance "theory", which lends itself to even far greater misunderstanding - but a layman will need to have that distinction made clear.
My hope was that providing a linked reference to A term whose use or meaning is specific to a particular field of endeavor tends to make the reader think, "wait a minute, am I really understanding how this word was intended?"
If you look at the entry for theory, which I tried to similarly clarify at the same time I was posting to law, you'll see that I was quickly reverted by Widsith, I assume primarily because my "quotation" was obviously illegal. There's some discussion at User talk:Widsith#theory that may better explain what I was trying to get at; and the very long "quotation" I had provided there should still be in the History tab for theory.
I was just trying to improve and clarify a couple of definitions of terms that particularly lend themselves to great confusion between their stricter and looser senses, and I agree that I was not doing a very good job of it. If nothing else, as I pointed out in my initial post here, the original quotation given at what is the 5th definition of law is terribly misleading. My edits had first been reverted by User:DCDuring, and there's some discussion (in both of the last two sections #s 216 & 215) on that talkpage that may be of interest. It might also be helpful to look at the huge "quotation" that was reverted - I've never seen a more cogent explanation of the problem with these terms, and perhaps something of use can still be distilled from it.
In the meantime, I can't imagine how "law" can refer to the 4th definition as "a one-sided contract" - I've never seen anything to that effect in another English dictionary, and wouldn't know how to interpret this other than "if the law says something I don't like, and is enforceable, then it is per se a one-sided contract between me and the state (or whoever)." So I still am under the impression that my contributions were potentially more helpful than not, even if they weren't done very well. Milkunderwood 03:29, 22 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Okay, I can see where you're coming from. Maybe a better way to do convey that the term can have strict and loose senses in scientific contexts would be to write {{sciences|strictly}} or some such context tag.
Or, alternatively, I recommend using "term of art" in the second sentence of the definition, because otherwise the definition becomes a {{non-gloss definition}} (basically, a term whose definition says what the term is or what it does grammatically rather than what it means). Non-gloss definitions aren't bad, they just look kind of confusing, especially when the definition is a non-gloss definition + some notes on usage.
I would recommend the former option more highly because the second sentence of the definition might get changed or moved to a usage notes section because the entry is on RFC, and besides it looks cleaner IMO.
As to the fourth definition, "one-sided contract", I agree that it seems dubious. The process for getting rid of definitions like those is to put them up on WT:RFV unless they're obviously rubbish. I don't know why DCDuring restored that fifth definition, TBH. Your edit was only a modification of it. —Internoob 05:51, 23 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
It's clear to me that this whole situation is going to require some thoughtful discussion among interested senior editors of Wiktionary, including yourself and perhaps DCDuring and Widsith. And by the way, I had forgotten to mention that I had left just the same sort of mess at the entry for hypothesis. I'm not at all a competent Wiktionarian (nor a Wikipedian for that matter), and am really just a passerby. It seems to me that the key to the problem lies in the explanatory paragraphs written by Ronald H Pine, but I have no idea how best to distill the distinctions he articulates, or how to present any such distillation in acceptable WT format. Of course Pine's article is not the only possible source for these distinctions - it's just that I'm not aware of any other specific source in mainstream scientific writing that distinguishes the terminology so clearly. Also note that it is not only definitions that will need consideration, but also illustrative quotations can be very misleading, as I had pointed out in the Newton/Einstein example in my original post here. I just hope I may have helped improve the dictionary in some small way by having raised these issues. Milkunderwood 07:21, 23 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Pine doesn't address the term proof, but back many decades ago when I was taught in the sixth grade exactly the same definitions and distinctions made by him, my teacher also pointed out that in a strict sense, proof cannot be a scientific concept, but only a mathematical one. That is, something can be disproved, but never proven. We were taught to always use "demonstrate" or some other such word instead. In careful mainstream scientific writing you will find this admonition being followed. Milkunderwood 08:16, 23 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Great. I've made this edit to law in the absence of anything better. If you want to discuss with others, there are discussions on WT:RFD#law, WT:RFV#law and WT:RFD#law. I have limited time and I should probably work on WOTD before we get behind again. I'm sorry for putting this off, but I'll look at the other things you mentioned when I get time. —Internoob 23:47, 23 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
:-) Internoob, I very much appreciate your patience with me. There can't be any particular hurry to get to the specific problems mentioned here. I had earlier stumbled across a less current version of the WT:RFD#law, and I don't really have anything useful to add to that "discussion". As I've said, I'm just a passerby who thought I might have something of value to contribute to Wiktionary, which the editors here may take or leave at their pleasure - or block me from WT, as the case may be. I will say, however, that being only an occasional editor at Wikipedia, including having made my share or more of mistakes and errors there, I have never encountered the kind of ugly intolerance and possessive attitudes that appear to be a fixture among a number of senior Wiktionary editors, including, or perhaps especially, User:SemperBlotto, whose talkpage I rummaged through a few days ago. The tone of discourse at Wikipedia is entirely different from here. To date, my impression has been that you're the only welcoming editor I've encountered here, which appears to be reflected in your good choice of wikihandle. Milkunderwood 04:01, 24 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Yes, the guys at RFD are being tools. This is a persistent problem here. We let them get away with it because they are excellent editors and administrators in every other regard.
I don't have a fix right now for the Pine quotation. It might get moved to the citations page eventually, and/or replaced with something else, but for the moment, I won't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. —Internoob 21:48, 25 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
I haven't looked here for a few days, but I'm very encouraged by your response. Your suggestion of specifying (strictly) is probably just as good as mine of term of art, but in either case, (sciences) alone is misleading and lends itself to argument, since scientists do use all this terminology sloppily as well as in their strict senses. Milkunderwood 17:56, 26 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

GedawyBot

[edit]

Hello, I opened a voting to have bot flag. I hope you particibate. Thanks.--M.Gedawy 19:04, 27 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Sorry, don't know which way to vote. —Internoob 00:18, 30 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

olympiad

[edit]

Re new def: isn't that capitalised at Olympiad? --Μετάknowledgediscuss/deeds 23:33, 4 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Actually, it seems from a Google Books search that both senses are commonly capitalized. I'll move it. —Internoob 02:20, 6 August 2012 (UTC)Reply