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User talk:Chris the speller/Archive 2

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5971:
Ford Motor Company produced a car mode named Fairbairn (not Fairlane), and there was a famous author named Evelyn Fairbairn. A person asked where thay lived might answer "Fairbairn", a person asked what kind of car they drive might answer "Fairbairn", and a person asked who their favorite author is might answer "Fairbairn". But all three can't have an article named Fairbairn, so qualifiers would be added to the city and the car, and the articles would be named "Fairbairn, Alaska" and "Fairbairn (automobile)", with a "Fairbairn" disambig page to aid navigation. The author already has a given name, and Knowledge naming conventions hold that the natural article title for a person is generally the given name and surname together, so no real conflict there, but they tend to get added to the dab page. If the list of people gets to be more than a handful, they should be moved to a surname article (which, by definition, is not a disambiguation page). In this universe, I don't see any article that has a claim to the natural title "Fairbairn", so the people can occupy that spot as a surname article. Having a See also section doesn't turn an article into a dab page; it's just a courtesy to readers who might land on that page seeking something other than those people. If I were shown that a Fairbairn-Sykes fighting knife was carried by 2 out of 3 people, and most people called it simply a Fairbairn, I would see the need for a disambig page (and for some body armor for myself), and the Fairbairn people would get moved to Fairbairn (surname). I admit that as the page stands now, this is a fairly close call, and if someone made it into a disambig page, I wouldn't die in the ditch, either. What drew me here was the hndis template, which was not applicable here (but is properly used on Andrew Fairbairn). Hope this helps.
476:
not pariculalry comfortable with them. You have made an article about an Australian prelate look like it was generated in America, and some of us get very thingy about that. We hate it. It's not the way we speak or write. Is there a wiki policy on this sort of thing? We can't really all be expected to conform to American English. I will have to lead the revolution if this is the case. For the moment, I have reverted the dates to a format Australians are comfortable with. Freman was an Australian (loved Americans, but didn't speak American English). My view is we should tolerate each valid form of English in their appropriate context (eg. American English in biographical articles which refer specifically to Americans, Australian (pretty much British) English in Australian article (especially biographical) etc. etc. What do you think?
5670:? It doesn't do anything the category system doesn't do already, but I think it would be nice to be able to do this for all people articles. Of course, getting an automated list would be even better. I wonder if the disambiguation templates should include a search link to encourage people to update them? At the moment, the special prefixindex function will find all pages starting with a particular string, but what would be even better is if a page could be automatically generated to show all articles with the same surname in their DEFAULTSORT magicword! Of course, people would still be needed to annotate the dab pages, unless infobox information could be used to do that... Sorry to bounce these ideas off you. Do any of tehm sound feasible or worth the effort of finding people who could make them work? 665:
contained nonstandard and unlinked dates. WP:DATE refers to the section "National varieties of English" in WP:MOS, which states "Articles that focus on a topic specific to a particular English-speaking country should generally conform to the usage and spelling of that country." I feel that this means that it also applies to national varieties of date formats, so if there is a hodgepodge, I tend to convert to the format that fits the topic of an article or its prevailing style of spelling. Anyone who reads WP:DATE carefully and examines my edits carefully will see that "date format per WP:DATE" is an accurate edit summary. Thanks for your suggestion, but I plan to ignore it. Happy editing!
3486:
somewhat and occasionally leave them somewhat confused and/or frustrated -- even if these effects are not consciously noted by the users affected. I also am concerned that the logic that justifies what i'll call the "narrow-scoped center" subsection of Hob actually commends changes nearby, in this case the likelihood that the Ho page does not need subdivision at the same points as at present: Hobb... is like Hoff..., Holm..., and Howard, so at some phase in the growth of the list (i have no confidence that it's a phase that's over) the appropriate structure of a single Ho page would be something like
5368:
change this. (Why convert anyway? I challenge anyone to use their hands to show me precisely four inches instead of precisely 10 cm. Blank out the MPH part of a standard speedometer, and it won't take long for a lifelong English-unit user to get used to metric speeds, especially given the uneven enforcement of speed laws in most jurisdictions.) It's an absurd uphill battle, but Knowledge isn't in the business of fomenting social change, however useful it would be for everyone (especially us Yanks!). ~
5690:
separate articles. The compact index seems pretty useful, but I'm still smarting from the loss of a couple of months' worth of edits when LoPbN got blown away, and have trouble getting excited about any lists of people by surname. Most of my work lately has been getting surname lists off disambig pages and into their own articles, but with no intention of following up on them. Sorry I can't get more excited about your ideas, but some other editors are bound to appreciate them plenty. Happy editing!
112:, you'll note it starts with "All of which lunacy...". To my American ear, this is an incorrect use of the word "which." Except in unusual cases, the pronoun "which," when referring to earlier antecedents, is nearly always used in a clause and not as the subject of a sentence. When the United Kingdom writer on 11 August 2006 restored my correction of "All of this lunacy" to "All of which lunacy," I hesitate to do battle, as perhaps the King's English allows such things, although I doubt it. 31: 1337: 630:, either format is acceptable", where "elsewhere" means articles that do not pertain to Ireland, Commonwealth countries, US, etc. And where do you get the information about "Most readers won't see a difference"? I always imagined that most readers are casual users of Knowledge, who have not set date preferences. Also, what edit summary would be more appropriate? As far as I know, every article that I have changed was at variance with the named guideline. 5038: 459:. Funny thing, I wrote to the Air Force Academy Historian because I wanted some info about the General's eary years and they sent me his home phone number. Hell, it took me two days before I built up the courage to call him. I mean what if he told me "Who the hell you? Why should I give you my personal information?" It turned out that we both had a lot in common and we spoke as if we've known each other for years. Man, that was something. 1294: 6047:
defer to the hndis page, just mentioning that there are several cases of "Joe Smith". However, the question remains whether a surname page should be an exhaustive list or something more or less, whereas a hndis page should certainly list all articles that have been written or should be written. The surname pages sometimes start to accumulate every editor's great-uncle, while disambig (hndis) pages have reasonably strict standards.
1645: 5415:<Please explain why you reverted my edits. This should not be marked as a disambig page. Per MoS:DP, "Pages only listing persons with certain given names or surnames who are not widely known by these parts of their name otherwise are not disambiguation pages". Unless you can explain your objection, I will correct the page. Here's a hint on courtesy: when reverting a good-faith edit, put some explanation in the edit summary. 1002: 4246:(In retrospect, i can see that such an algorithm was probably actually implemented in software by an editor, now mostly inactive, who did a lot of section subdivisions for a while.) The obvious objection to that procedure comes when it produces two subsections, with several groups making up the first, and one entry making up the second; adding another entry will then probably require a resubdivision 90% or 95% of the time. 4689: 2190: 5100:. Is this per the fourth bullet point in "Disambiguation pages" that states the following? "Each bulleted entry should, in almost every case, have exactly one navigable (blue) link; including more than one link can confuse the reader." I could not find a guideline against inclusion against such links in the immediately following section, "What not to include," so I assume you made this change per this point. 498:
satidfactory solution - though your change is a compromise (since it puts the day date first). I am saying this again based on my knowledge and experience of English teaching. I once did the TEFLA (Cambridge University) course for teaching English as a foreign langusge (whcih I taught in the former Eastern bloc), so I am pretty clear on these distinctions in the spoken and written language. Any other ideas?
1566: 4250:
minimize the greatest subsection-size, and perhaps to minimize statistical measures of scatter of the subsection sizes. At the least, such subdivisions should reduce the probability that further editing of headings will again soon be necessary, and IMO they probably also decrease time for users to find the entry they seek. (It's probably a lot easier to do good subdivisions than to formalize the process.)
5666:, which is fairly well sorted. I'm currently wondering whether to make another big push to get a supercategory set up for all people articles (dead ones as well as living), as the use of DEFAULTSORT seems to be fairly widespread now, so such a supercategory would really help with keeping dab pages up to date (similar in a way to how List of People by Name used to try and do this). Did I ever show you 3545:
sequentially or largely in a rough approximation of binary search (i.e., homing in by hit-and-miss). (My impression is that most encyclopedias stick to volumes covering a letter of the alphabet or a range of single letters, suggesting to me that the exceptions either admire the appearance of volumes of uniform thickness, or save expense by not requiring their binderies to adapt to differing sizes.)
5547:) Thanks for your suggestions, but Roper (appliances) is a redirect right back to Whirlpool Corporation, so there didn't seem to be much sense in sending readers in a circle. The automated tool I was using does not facilitate using a different edit summary for the one delink when most of its edits are link disambiguations, so the comment was not particularly accurate, sorry. Happy editing! 339:. I realized that their names were not inscribed in Puerto Rico's Memorial dedicated to Puerto Rican fallen soldiers "El Monumento de la Recordacion" and those of Puerto Rican descent. I started a campaign to get this done by writting to the President of the Puerto Rican Senate and finally after many investigations I received this e-mail from the government two days ago: 5436:, for example, is presently not an article at all - it is a list of names all featuring the element "Abelardo", and its sole function is to distinguish one Abelardo from another. That makes it AFAIAC a disambiguation tool functionally, until such time as someone adds enough extra content to it to turn it into an article, when it can properly be re-categorised. 1918:
language is spoken in the southern part of Louisiana. Also keep in mind, the "creoles (locals), like the French Cajuns, has a way with words (and mighty proud of it!) that is only acceptable at home and no place else. Where else in the world would you hear someone ask you how you're doing with, "Where you at?" except in the "city that care forgot,"
5187:? What happened was that a clause had been inserted into the speedy deletion criteria allowing people to delete, or tag for deletion, disambiguation pages with only one link on them, or only one entry. Sometimes, such disambiguation pages need expanding, not deletion, so it needs careful thought and so wasn't appropriate for a speedy criteria. 398: 541: 3247:(We've split the logical level below Da into two physical levels, implemented in this case by the Daa-Dam page and the Dal section within it; also, with Daley as whole surname, the logical "Daley, B" etc. are physically unneeded (so far) and the sections "Daley, B-J" and "Daley, L-W" get what would logically be within those.) 4129:, that is, just far enough to exclude the names in the sibling sections, and be willing to trust the users' common sense to "smooth the transition" down to sections whose content is implicitly or (in the case of these given-name ranges within the Bennets) explicitly narrower than the (Benne) hdg that includes them all. 4512:] has sadden me. It doesn't matter how many articles you have written, contributions you have made or how many years you have dedicated to making this project a credible one. A hacker, it seems has the power of making people consider you an untrustful person and turning some people in the community against you. 647:. WP:DATE does not specify that it should be in the local format so stating you are making the change in accordance with WP:DATE is not quite correct. It is in accordance with your choice. The particular article is not really relevant as my comment was generic. If you don't like my suggestion, then ignore it. -- 694:, the dates were consistent and linked. The "National varieties of English" also states "If an article is predominantly written in one type of English, aim to conform to that type...". You're picking and choosing which parts you're compliant with. Anyhow, we're wasting too much time on a minor topic. Thanks. -- 3279:
laws, sausages, and LoPbN listings shouldn't have to watch them being made: even setting aside the kind of names that could force implementation of the jammed levels, the concept of jamming levels is complex and slippery enough to justify generally avoiding unnecessarily hinting at its existence in practice.
1192: 3672:
hand, so that e.g. John IX did not immediately follow John IV, and occupants of the same throne are closer to each other than those with the same Roman numeral on other thrones. I was satisfied with a barely common-sense scheme that may deserve replacement with one that i continue to despair to specify.
6046:
Answer to 2: None exists. Perhaps an invisible note could be added to each page, encouraging a change in the other page. Just being made aware of the other page would probably be a help. With just 2 Andrews, they should probably both be listed on each page. For longer lists, I have seen surname pages
5903:
and taken some or all of them out, but then it would truly only be a list of people with that surname, so it would be a surname article, and WP:D no longer would apply, so they could go back in. If you know that some of these are generally called simply "Fairbairn", then I would completely change the
4413:
recommended me to you as a good proofreader... ;-). I need help with the Betances article. It is quite big, but I'm almost done with it (the only thing remaining to do for it would be a thorough grammar and spell check, as well as attending any request that might come up from those who would evaluate
3547:
_ _ I don't want to claim that my intuition in this is necessarily reliable, but i do think its notions need to be addressed, perhaps by experiment. I think that if i haven't convinced you, you should leave Hoa - Hoe as a sample and work toward a presentation of the scheme, including clearly its full
3362:
I started adding Gion entries, & some Gior ones, with the thot that my merging Gio and Gip might be a waste, if they would need splitting back. Together, your and my Giordano entries outstrip the ToC depth capacity, and i haven't decided yet when to subdivide the Gim-Giz pg into Gim-Giq, Gir, and
3117:
_ _ I continue unconvinced that Dab or Dab-style or list pages for people with a common given-name are encyclopedic; when i find one (maybe even the 4-or-so-name sub-list you removed) cluttering a Dab, i generally dump it onto a tk page with a note deprecating its worth, on the theory that preserving
2390:
Hi again. No problem. I assumed it was an error, which is why I left you the note; I hope it wan't too snippy. As I'm sure you know, it's incredibly frustrating reverting the same crap over and over. Especially since the Nottingham Nick apparently wanted his own page and apparently refused to read up
2379:
has repeatedly changed the page to the crap about some nice tall kid from Nottingham. I have reverted the page. Again. For the third time in the past couple of hours. I have placed a note on his talkpage suggesting that he make his own page if he thinks he's worthy of a bio; I don't agree that he is,
115:
So, my question is, Chris the speller: Where can one go to find a Knowledge-based grammar expert? Have I really erred in my correction? When and how does one decide which fray to enter? Why am I awake at 3:00 am in my time zone talking about grammar? Will Knowledge soon take over my life? (Rhetorical
5814:
Thank you Chris the speller for directing me and being so kind. Shall we work together as I need a mentor and I have already done a lot of mess. I love billiard and I have coached many italian nationals and I work at Deutsche as a hobby but my main interest is nice girls Art, Disco Music but I still
5440:
But you seem to be extraordinarily attached to this one small bit of the procedures, whereas I don't feel strongly about it at all, mostly because it is such a very small bit of the procedures and makes little sense, so by all means trot along and put your edit back. Better still, I'll do it for you
4097:
_ _ There should also be a section on the same talk page for talking abt issues of subdivision-produced structure that arise, so new and experienced subdividers can learn broad principles from discussion of specific differences of approach. I flatter myself and the other experienced subdividers with
3656:
For instance, Irwin Shaw does not belong on the Irw... page where Steve Irwin belongs, and the number of (surname-)Irwin entries there makes it likely, without information except counts of Irwin-near-the-end titles, that Irwin is a European-derived name and that instances where it is at the start of
3127:
_ _ I could do my next large subdivision in stages, with unnecessary saves to in effect document the conditions that each division of a section remedies (or even revert the one i did for Dal..., and recapitulate the process, if another good opportunity doesn't come along soon) to provide an implicit
431:
You are quite welcome for the Barnstar. Interestingly enough, I created that stub less than an hour ago. It turns out that while US Navy ships are seemingly well-represented on Knowledge (hundreds, possibly thousands of US Navy ships articles), the surface has only been scraped. There have been many
152:
Ray, sorry for the delay. I took a few months off Knowledge. Remember that when it takes over your life. My grammar skills are, I feel, sufficient for Knowledge editing, so I do not often seek an expert. When in doubt, rummage around the Manual of Style. Correct any grammar that is clearly wrong. If
5768:
page? I used to work on disambiguation pages quite a bit, but I kind of lost track of the most recent developments due to lack of time, so I am not entirely sure exactly how the dab/first name collisions are supposed to be handled now (MOSDAB hasn't exactly become any clearer on this subject since
5584:
Please allow me to clear this up. Veneziano literally means "of Venice" or "from Venice" or "the Venetian" - thus it is not so much a surname as a nickname given to people of Venetian origin. However, if you wish to have an entry on the surname that excludes other uses of the term that people might
4836:
And just so you understand, I completely agree with the MoS and follow it to a T. Unfortunately, many of the editors in the current discussion do not, and given that it is only a guideline and not policy, there are issues with getting people to follow it. I am adding the refs for these people who
4515:
I have never abused of my powers and I have used Knowledge as a medium to educate others. Yes, I have no regrets about having made so many contributions to the Pedia. I exhort all of my friends here to make sure that their passwords are strong ones so that you will not have to go through what I am
3861:
Bottom line? If you're a programming wiz and have the interest, you may see directions for refinement of your tool; if you're an aggressive researcher, you may want to check and/or flesh out my understandings above. In case you have some such interest, here's an incomplete list of LoPbN appearances
3835:
In the case of Icelandic, D and d seem to be common transliterations, tho Dh and dh are more logical based on my understanding of the sounds (the Th sound of English "there", at least approximately), and Th and th are consistent with English orthography and look more natural in English, at the cost
3552:
group of pages, where more eyeballs can weigh the two schemes against each other. I think implementing straddles in a consistent fashion would affect most LoPbN tree pages, probably entailing more widely varying page titles and a less intuitive and otherwise user-friendly scheme than what i'm about
3278:
Besides their ability to delay the need for subdividing a page (when the number of levels in the ToC exceeds 5), level jams are IMO commended by the likelihood that they'll be overlooked by everyone but LoPbN editors who undertake subdivisions, and AFAI can see even by most of those. Those who like
768:
Hi! Thanks for the reply, and the advice. Actually, after I messaged you, I saw on the history that another editor was doing another major overhaul on my overhaul, like re arranging the sections around. The hard part was I was inputting the citations, and it was hard to do it with the sections all
615:
states that both forms are acceptable. The Mediawiki software will actually convert linked dates to the reader's specified preference. Most readers won't see a difference in the changes you made. I'd suggest you hold off doing wholesale date updates as some people may react to it in the same manner
475:
Hi Chris- I just have to ask. Are you a native speaker of American English? The date formats you have entered on Cardinal James Freeman's article are not in the Australian/English format- and I have to say that some of us who don't speak American English really notice these sorts of changes and are
104:
As a relative Knowledge newbie, I've started making my own contributions. A recent grammar fix--which I thought was minor--to someone else's main article contribution, brought on a near-immediate reversion to the original by its author. This could balloon into something unnecessarily big. It may be
5898:
I don't like to go around confusing or upsetting other editors or readers, so I'd like to know what it was about the change that you didn't agree with. I see no articles on that page that deserve to be called simply Fairbairn. If there were a couple, I would make the page into a real disambig page
5337:
and punish the Americans for using pounds, feet, miles and acres, by making many Knowledge articles difficult for them to use and understand. After all, just because those are the units they learned in school and see every day doesn't mean they should get anything useful out of Knowledge, not when
5103:
It could be argued that the removed topics are more notable than some that are currently listed (and, admittedly, that an article should exist for them; I may take that on at some point). It would seem helpful to list them here for people who may be looking for them on Knowledge, to make it clear
4621:
I'd like to avoid an endless edit war, but when there's only two users with opposing views, resolution can be difficult. I'm hoping you can help us move towards a solution with a third opinion, although of course no-one has an obligation to treat your word as binding. From my own point of view, if
4089:
to list pages or even sections overdue for section-subdivision, each as an appropriate lk, to ease getting there. I can't decide whether an alpha list or an oldest-first list is more likely to work well; in fact, the answer may well depend on the work-to-worker ratio. Hmmm. An alpha list makes it
3671:
Consider whether your ext-ed is smart enuf to be adapted to dealing with lists of monarchs and hierarchs (see e.g. the Benedicts, Felipe or Philip or Phillips, Georges, Friedrich or Fredericks, Johns, Piuses, Louises, Constant/Constantines), whose blunt-instrument automated sortings i corrected by
3258:
IMO, "Daley" "needs to make no apology" for being used in its usual sense "the name Daley" rather than in LoPbN's usual broad sense "Daley and anything that begins with it". (Committing in theory to that broad sense was decided on when LoPbN exceeded 26 name-bearing pages, and reaffirmed by me, in
664:
I don't generally change date formats in an article where they all adhere to WP:DATE, but where some of them don't, and the others have inconsistent formats (] and ]), I try to make them consistent, taking into account the nationality of the topic. You will find that all the articles I have edited
295:
Hey Chris, you know what? After furthur investigation, I found out that Carmen was not a Durnier after all. It was a typo on my behave (I think that I need glasses). Her surname was only Lozano and then after marriage she became Lozano-Dumler. I made all the corrections plus, she was a 2Lt. and
276:
I only wish that I had a nurse as good-looking as her in the Marine Corps. Man, she was hot then (she still is alive). If you are wondering why some Puerto Ricans have French and Corsican (Italian) surnames (My ancestors were Corsican0, I invite you to take a look at two short articles that I've
272:
Carmen's surnames was Lozano Durnier (In Puerto Rico some people continue to use their fathers and mothers surname). She kept her maiden surnames. Her husband's surname was Dumler, but she preferred her surnames. I have kept in touch with some people in the Women's Military Memorial Committee.
5970:
The key is understanding what the purpose of a disambig page is. Per WP:D, when a "term likely to be the natural choice of title for more than one article", the need for a disambig page arises. Imagine a parallel universe where there is a large city in Alaska named Fairbairn (not Fairbanks), and
5399:
I mentioned MoS:DP in the edit summary for the Wolk page, but this is not a clear enough reference for some editors, apparently. Well, now I better read the MoS and get some experience with disambig pages (fixing about 5,000 seems not to be enough). I'm not sure how to avoid getting into disputed
5367:
landing was called off in nautical miles and thousands of feet in altitude. Businesses who quite reasonably don't want to replace all their English-measured capital equipment stoke the silly but pervasive fears Americans have of "conversion"; the government has virtually no power or motivation to
4249:
While i don't care to try a detailed analysis or to state an algorithm, i think that starting with that procedure's result, and repeatedly shifting one of those "groups" from a larger-than-average tentative subsection into an adjacent smaller one, is at least often the only kind of step needed to
2584:
Hi, first of all I wanted to thank you for you help on vandal patrol :). I don't know if you are aware of it, but starting today, there are new unified user warnings in place. The idea behind this rewamp was, among other things, to add some consistency to their look and wording. Check them out at
174:
Chris, I have taken to heart your advice from several month ago, and removed the dates from the disambig. in the articles I have edited. Since nearly all these articles are about politicians, I am using their office; governor, senator, representative, delegate, etc instead. It nearly always works
4192:
needing subdivision into new pages, resulting from section subdivisions i've done in the last few weeks, and someone, maybe me, will have to finally explain to interested LoPbN editors (potential page subdividers) this process, which previously has been esoteric enuf that i think no one else has
3967:
_ _ Finally, i've worked over some of your recent work; probably you already realize that absence of "Top" near your latest edit of a page on your "My contributions" page indicates someone haveing edited that page since you. Don't hesitate to ask questions, where my summaries leave you guessing.
3854:
Uppercase Eth (in contrast to its lowercase partner!) is (at least practically) indistinguishable in the fonts i've seen from the Vietnamese letter Đ (lowercase version đ), whose sound value i don't know. (In contrast to Icelandic, tho, the VN letters seem to be very seldom used within English
1910:
The excerpt says, "Both the pioneer Creole priest of Louisiana, classical poet, missionary among the Choctaw Indians, and his happy-go-lucky brother, "old Jupiter in a black blanket," as Mrs. Dagmar Renshaw LeBreton styles him in her splendid volume Chaht a-Ima — Dominique, who was a master of
4044:
Did you ask abt bullet hdgs? The edit box tool is a big help, and while i'm neglecting such pages relative to others, i foresee possibly resuming bullet-hdg maint before Slyguy finishes. (Also perhaps reducing the space cost slightly by collapsing single-entry bullet sections into a single line
3544:
Applied to the degree it is in your sample, i think this scheme disrupts the orderly process of stepping down one level per letter of the name being sought, and applied to its logical conclusion, i think it loses that concept completely, leaving users to search for the section they need either
2678:
sees both as acceptable, and I would say that publically is still in reasonably wide public use- not quite archaic yet. I'd say that it's more a matter of personal taste than a matter of spelling, but as I said, it's not something I'll lose any sleep over. Good work on the spellchecking you do,
4509:
As you all know, some hacker cracked my password and I have been stripped of my admin powers. I can understand an admin. being blocked, but stripped of his powers without a fair hearing or consensus, I can't. I have stated that I changed my password and would like my powers back, however the
4148:
but in practice, saying that (or, more to the point, since few casual editors do or should read the relevant documentation, putting that approach into action) leads to some editors adding (in the hypothetical case) 4-or-more-letter names beginning Xyz under that heading, even if an "Xyza" hdg
4124:
It's a fair guess that the ===== People named Bennett ===== hdg was mine, but, second, it was indeed unnecessary when you found it: While i (or whoever) probably felt a little awkward about subdividing the people with that surname, without having yet established a heading for one of those two
3485:
before doing similar searches among one screenful of entries. While i don't mean to suggest that straddled sections are equivalent to no structure, i do think that the structure of your variation is less intuitive and more error prone, and that these will badly serve users by slowing them down
3254:
For those who display the ToC (the right choice for navigating LoPbN pages), "Daley" clearly parallels its siblings, Dalec, Dalen, and (to a lesser extent, "People named Dale" -- AKA " Dale" or "Dale¶", if you will). It may take practice, but my eye scans ToCs looking for deviations from that
5689:
I think the Aaron (name) page is OK for now. If anyone decides to add onomastic information to the top of the article, it's better to have it at the top of one article than to have redundant ramblings in two articles. When the given name has different origins that the surname, I tend to favor
3249:
_ _ The level jam is (for now) feasible bcz the entries belonging under each of "Daley", "People named Daley", "Daley as surname", and "Daley as whole surname" are the same in each case. I have one clear reason, and maybe a couple of vaguer ones, for choosing, as title for the physical level
1917:
Roger Baudier of CAS (see Ref 2) appears to have made the actual quote from LeBreton's Chaht a-Ima rather than LeBreton herself. From what it appears, LeBreton simply called Dominique "old Jupiter in a black blanket." There is certainly lumptiness of the sentence of Baudier but not in the way
1702:
I am not generally drawn to edit wars, and am not qualified to help in this one, except to say that the article seems to need references. The right references would probably settle any disputes. Also, you might find other editors more likely to help if you register and sign in. Happy editing!
200:
I like "(Delaware representative)", but not "(DE representative)", as people who live outside the US may not be familiar with postal abbreviations. If there are two in one state, you have to wing it, based on some other distinction, such as "(Delaware representative and judge)" or "(Delaware
4094:
tildes) to aid the alternate approach of looking for repeatedly neglected ones? I can also picture multiple lists implemented as a single template, each list showing only the pages added before a certain date; editing the template to remove the sections just subdivided would result in their
497:
Thanks Chris - but we still don't say 19 Novemeber - because it reads to us like "nineteen November" (which we never say or write- and sounds and looks unlike Asutralian English) not "the nineteenth of November" (which we do say and write). I'm still not exactly sure if there is a mutually
4533:
My adminship has been restored and let me tell you, we've got to very careful with our passwords. You know, despite the headache that this caused me, it really made me feel good to know how many friends I have in Knowledge. The support has been incredible. I can't let my friends here down.
3431:, i had thot you were describing a level jam such as i mention above (something i practice cautiously, and even so with mental reservations) rather than what i've thot ... a lot? ... no, but frequently (tho briefly, except very early on) and strongly. My ready example is based on an old 3283:
On the other hand, it's lonely out here on the fringes of the LoPbN design, and i'm quite pleased that there's someone thinking about the issues. I'd be pleased to hear your reaction, whether agreeing or disagreeing. And thanks for getting involved enough for the question to arise.
5899:
and move the people to a new article, Fairbairn (surname). From what I can see, the only non-people articles are a few in the See also section that simply contain Fairbairn as part of the article name. If I had been in a fairly grumpy mood, I might have applied the instruction in
2702:
This issue seems to pop up every month or two on my talk page, and I sometimes despair at how few editors seem to add hatnotes to biographical articles (some even remove them! aaargh!). So was wondering whether you might be intersted in working togerher on some guidance on this.
4157:
and its siblings). My intention with "People named ..." hdgs is to make as explicit as possible (via page and section titles) where to add a given name, and to reinforce it by using section levels within a page's tree of sections analogously with page levels within the tree of
2809:
and lack of sources. I've given a shout on the Village Pump to see if I can get someone to help out with these articles who actually speaks Swedish because I'm starting to suspect that these people may be notable, there just are not any English sources that actually back that
4171:
_ _ Finally, BTW, since i'd squeezed two levels of populated logical sections into one level of physical sections (having run out of elbow- and head-room), i moved all but the contents of the Benn section (including its descendants) out to new pages, and renamed the page to
3021: 3471:
drilling down from Ma a page or three, then glancing thru the top-level section headings, and the sub-headings of one 2nd-level section, and perhaps those of one child-section per generation for a total of perhaps as many as 5 generations, before lking to the appropriate
5426:
Looking briefly at your history I see that several people have disagreed with you about this same issue (for example in the exchange about the name Kurata a bit higher up this page), and my point is doubtless more or less the same one that has been made several times
3120:
_ _ If you don't get how to subdivide sections, i blame either my deficiencies as a documenter (minor-league-pathologically self-defeating compulsiveness) or my resulting tendency to put my efforts elsewhere. Don't apologize if you don't learn how; we can't really be
2841:
Thanks for the explain- and for keeping wiki cleaned up. That software seems a small step towards closing the gap between Cybernetics and cognition so eventually humans will not need any memory and can spend all their conscious energy in contemplation of the divine.
3446:
_ _ I think the way to state my misgivings is this: navigation in the form of where the eye rests, or rather the shrinking range it flits within, is much more efficient where there are effective signposts. If you're familiar with the computer science concepts of
96:
Hey, Chris the speller. I love the fact that your user name says you're out there (in here?) to make the word safe for correct spelling. Hurrah! I love correct spelling, but I hate bad spelling more intensely. I regularly proofread the magazine I own and publish
5556:
Silly me, I should have checked that. However I leave circular redirects in place, sometimes... I know it may be confusing but maybe an article will arise. Still, no worries. Feel free to revert (if you already did I won't re-revert)... thanks for the followup.
5301:
I wouldn't say it was canvassing, but I had no idea what you were trying to promote in that message. If you want to draw attention to the discussion, a one-sentence pointer would suffice. I couldn't tell if your post was sarcasm, or mock sarcasm. — Carl
345:
I would like to notify that I received the confirmation of Mr. José Pagán, Public Affairs Officer, that indeed Captain Manuel Rivera and Captain Humberto Roque complete the requirements to be included in the list of soldiers at the Memorial Monument.
3661:
of the Irwins, and therefore a person named Irwit but piped with the misspelling Irwin) may be the only Cat-entry with Irwit in any position, and thus is much less certain to be a Euro-name that should have been inverted (and thus perhaps best left to
3118:
trash to save the labor of fools who would waste energy recreated it or hunting it down in the history, is an efficiency. But i don't think WP should try to substitute for either baby-name books or "List of people who make me cool by sharing my name".
4090:
convenient for people to subdivide a page in the course of doing other work on the same page (whether or not the other work is sequential by page. What do you think of entries in alpha order, each preceded on its line by a time stamp (~~~~~, that's
5059:
This message was placed automatically, and it is possible that the bot is confused and found similarity where none actually exists. If that is the case, you can remove the tag from the article and it would be appreciated if you could drop a note on
769:
over the place. Anyway, I did not know the tag can be invisible. Maybe when you use the popups or other software huh? Anyway, since you asked, maybe you can go back to the article and spell check again for me. That will be a big help. Thanks again.--
4908:
I don't think of them as articles, or proto-articles. So hndis actually seems a good idea to me. Presumably this has all been discussed somewhere, and you have a good reason for doing what you're doing. Can you give me a link to an explanation? --
250:
I agree with you, he isn't notable enough to merit an article in Knowledge (you know that I would have written about him if otherwise). About the the Revolt against the U.S., I provided a link to the most notable of the revolts which was the
3125:, and it's one of my specialties, tho i welcome anyone's teaching themselves how, or trying it and leaving it to others (maybe me) to clean up after. And those who get cleaned up after may gain insight by looking at the diffs for the cleanup. 3443:
now that the need for a name arises. And while i think of the more familiar level jams as mild cheating, these straddles worry me much more; i have invariably avoided them. But i find my hard line about them softening as i try to state my
5338:
their despised government has refused to toe the line on using the metric system like all the respectable countries do. By prohibiting conversion of metric units into something Americans can understand, we'll make them change their tune!
3476:
to fall short of effortlessness but still be simpler, probably quicker and less subject to the occasional frustration of wasted effort due to momentary confusions between, e.g., Holt... and Hotl... and infinitely less boring, compared to
1881:
I was not sure about LeBreton's book; it was missing quotes at the end, and I made them italics, as "volume" indicates a book, not a chapter. That sentence is might lumpy, and might be better with "Dominique" moved before "old Jupiter".
4120:
First, even if a hdg were to exist where that elbow room now is (other than as a comment for suggesting markup for future use), i would with my present opinions have implemented ==== Bennett ==== instead of ===== People named Bennett
3780:
I exclude from this list the three German umlauted vowels, tho they are often transliterated as the naked vowel followed by "e": IMO duplicate entries for these are a reasonably good idea, tho this aspect is beyond the scope of your
4201:
or an index card with nearly 20 such titles, mostly between Cas-Caz and Gri, all needing splitting. Yes, Brown needs splitting, having both too many sections, and its ToC's deepest level including sections at two successive logical
1773:
Santa was good to me. Still trying to figure out why it is that when he's good to me my bank account goes down correspondingly. I proofread it, only 1 word misspelled, so I changed hyphens to endashes in number ranges. Good work!
616:
others react to US & British spelling changes. I, personally, don't see the point in spending time doing something the software handles automatically. But if you want to continue, please use a more appropriate edit summary. --
5247:
Did you take the time to read what you reverted? It contained no instruction except the true statement that not linking such dates would avoid the question, which I considered a helpful (and not, of course mandatory) suggestion.
1843: 3363:
Gis-Giz pgs: if i'm quick implementing the new, more editor-friendly division support, this will be an early page-division demonstrating it; if not, i may delay the pg subdivision, rather than falling back on the bad-old system.
5793:
first in the list? Surely he can't be the most well-known Fyodor there's even been? Also, at what point would you say the list of people with the first name of Fyodor would become too long to be left with the rest of the
3192:
_ _ You may have noticed the phenomenon/design-decision that i call a "level jam", in the sense of two or more levels of the logical hierarchy being jammed into one actual section level. The theoretical structure there is
3705:
_ _ I'm not really surprised at how many alph errors your tool is finding, tho i certainly wasn't thinking about how many i missed, along with the ones that i occasionally fix. This is a very fine advance! Thank you for
3579:
and give your attention to those with size changes above a threshold that you determine by experimentation (probably excluding en masse the currently voluminous, and apparently very careful, entry-per-edit additions by
3263:"; the constructions "Name Daley" and "People named Daley" are ongoing apologies for that design decision.) Using the apologetic title where "Daley" will do draws attention to the apparently nonexistent people surnamed 5520:
Hi, when you changed the chronology section, the edit summary said you were disambiguating Roper, but you just removed the square brackets from Roper. A proper disambiguation would be more like this: ]... which gives
3741:$ $ $ The tool already handles most of these, and more are added as I run across them. However, some (like the Polish letters) do not survive the cut-and-paste into my editor, so I eyeball them and keep on truckin'. 4850:
We're in complete agreement. The problem is, other editors on the discussion page have demanded it. Can you make the ref section invisible and still use the cite.php? If so, that would work for now. Let me know.
4167:, finding 5 people whose eventual addition would require 3 new sections, and "pre-emptively" added them and their sections, lest work between now and their addition require reworking organization done in the interim. 1754:. LoL. There was some work done on the article, and I just submitted it for peer review. I forgot there might be some spelling errors. Please do me the honors. Thank you. And how've you been? Was Santa nice to you?-- 179:." Do you think "James Williams (DE representative)" would be better, or anything else? What would you do if there were two in one state, as there are for some names in larger states, say (Delaware2 representative)? 4086: 3733:
Those that would be English letters but for the presence of a diacritical-mark: é ö ñ Ł are a good sampling; these i treat, without substantial objections, as if they were identical to the corresponding English
3129: 2778: 1694:. Unfortunately this wikipedia needs a whole lot more than just spell-checking. Look at the Lysy version now. If you are interested in real history and not only wikipedia versions, you might want to take a look at: 3455:, their human-executed equivalents are both insufficient as methods for finding the bio you want in the LoPbN structure. (If you'd like a feel for that, exaggerating the problem the problem helps: take a trip down 175:
although sometimes requires a state name in front, and very rarely requires another qualifier. So, for instance, there were several James Williams' who were U.S, Representatives. I am calling the one in Delaware "
4461:
cornmitted, Constutional, lientenant, ernigrate, Olyrnpic, Bartholmew's and Batholomew's (for Bartholomew's), Parlianient, asssembly, demonstraters, bv (by), falth-healer (faith), charactor, Novernber, publie.
190:" to "Nicholas Van Dyke (senator)." This will standardize the usage. Do you have the knowledge or juice to do this? I don't seem to, as the names have been used before. You help and advice is much appreciated. 5993: 1015:
and hopefully this one has made your day better. Spread the WikiLove by smiling to someone else, whether it be someone you have had disagreements with in the past or a good friend. Smile to others by adding
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Thanks Chris! I suspected this is how it should have been done, but I had my doubts on a few points. Your example was most helpful in clearing them up. I am, however, curious why you decided to leave
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Thanks for pointing that out. If you see me make mistakes like that in future, drop a note on my talk page. I'm more likely to notice that way. I'll try and check the other surname pages I created.
4822:
I'm not sure I follow you. Are you referring to the references section or to external links within the references section? I'm adding the links due to concerns by editors on the discussion page. —
4969:
acoustical instrument, never on the Bass guitar. I had the fortune to watch them live, have several of their albums, and that's the instrument I've always seen. (sorry for my delay in replying) --
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possible headings that would mention "Bennett" and embrace all the existing Bennetts, i'm now of the opinion that one should focus on the role of a heading in restricting the scope of its section
4117:
Between === Benne === on one hand and ====== Bennett, A-E ====== and its siblings on the other, there was "elbow room" left, that is, capability of "===="-level and "====="-level hdgs intervening.
3128:
tutorial. The hope of it being useful to you would be enuf reason to do so, and if you ended up complementing my deficiencies by leveraging your review of it into a commentary on the process, for
4181: 2528: 1666:, and in doing so has made an important and very significant contribution to the Knowledge community, thereby earning this TomStar81 Spelling Award and my deepest thanks. Keep up the good work! 4864:
Like I said previously, I don't have a problem doing that, it's just that the other editors on the talk page won't allow it. Can you post a new discussion section asking for input? Thanks. —
4143:(Up to about 25) people with Xyz as surname go directly under that hdg, and people with longer surnames that begin that way get subhdgs of it (when the Xyzs and Xyz...s total more than abt 25). 3587:
Also make a depth-first left-to-right tour (i.e., an alpha-order one) thru the entire LoPbN tree (using just the lks in the "Access to rest of list" boxes, at least once and maybe periodically.
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you changed it. I hope that helps explain "what I didn't agree with". In any and all cases, I'm quite comfortable with the page as it is at the moment, and happy to leave it as it is. Cheers,
2959:
Hi saw you wander across my watch list in the kraton disambig - thanks for that - suspect i should have done it a long time ago since the problems i had with the polymer guys... thanks again
218:
Chris, my old friend, How you been? Man, I was thinking about you just yerterday. I wanted to know if you can take a look at my latest article and correct any mispellings. The article is "
5815:
need some directions being very lazy..Wish you a good day Olivier Doria. I would be very honoured if you contacted me but I bet you can't find my e-mail (but the bet is 1 good beer or pasta)
1307:
O.K., so maybe you don't believe in Santa, but I still want to wish you and your loved ones a "Happy Holidays" and all of the happiness in the world and the best new year ever. Your friend,
5104:
that they're in the right place but that the articles do not yet exist, as opposed to making them wonder whether they misspelled the topic they were interested in reading about. But, does
4225:
you did at least one subdvn, or just bcz you are showing substantial interest in subdvns. An obvious procedure for doing simple (all subdivisions at same level) section subdivision is this:
568:
Hi, I notice that you change dates (not always consistently from that I can see, so not sure how that works) and opening paragraphs. Opening per WP:DATE is different from the guidance at
4607:
page, and after a wee look I figured that was an acceptable link. However, another editor has recently removed it, and reverted me when I restored it. The edit summaries at the dab page,
4185: 3949: 3879: 2590: 5662:? I added some extra surname to it, and I think it may need splitting into given name and surname dab pages, but I not sure, so I thought I'd ask you. I found the Aarons by looking at 726:
Sounds like you have it pretty well-covered.  :) The original stub was (I thought) a subject already covered under the "Barnstorming" header. Thanks for letting me know what's up! -
4957:"I was disambiguating links to Bass, and could not tell whether the instrument used by Chaves and Collaco was a Double bass or a Bass guitar. Perhaps you could take care of this one." 3953: 3467:
with something over 500 entries and no sections. Even despite the intervening growth (the Marti... names, e.g., numbered 49 then, and 182 now, by my quick counts), i presume you find
153:
the style grates a little bit, be careful; if nothing else is wrong, it's usually best to let it slide, but if the whole article or paragraph needs copyediting, give it the overhaul.
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_ _ Congratulations again on your worthwhile tool-making efforts -- in particular, your addition of what in retrospect seems like a natural extension, counting the sections' entries.
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Hi Chris, trouble is when you're on NP patrol you see so many one-line articles without much notability. If you're going to expand this one I'll gladly remove the CSD tag. Cheers,
4188:, all of which i will leave beyond the scope of this discussion: i hope to have a new and more editor-friendly scheme for such edits in place later this week. I have a backlog of 4104:
_ _ (Those are too many ideas to tackle at once; best to start with a simple list & consider these ideas only if and when they seem likely to address real problems that arise.)
6065: 6037: 5204:"The attacks of September 11, 2001 are the most serious..." is just as ungrammatical as "The attacks of 11 September 2001, are the most serious...". We should encourage neither. 3808:
Old English thorn was sometimes the "th" in "that" and sometimes the th in "thin" (but i suspect it may have had both sound within the same year only during transitional periods),
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Ah . . . perhaps you have mistaken me for somebody with lots of time and energy. Well, I'll consider your, um, invitation in the amicable spirit with which it was proffered. --
4403: 4194: 3932: 3897: 4922: 4173: 3901: 582:
I have addressed this on the project's talk page. As far as I know, my changes have been consistent with each other, but, more importantly, consistent with the guidelines at
5056:. It is possible that you have accidentally duplicated contents, or made an error while creating the page— you might want to look at the pages and see if that is the case. 4232:
Group the entries according to the next char after the end of their maximal common initial substring (counting "no further char" as a pseudo-char that i'd call "EndOfWord").
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according to the design principles i've been following. The logic of those principles is largely experience with the alternatives: it would be perfectly consistent to say
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Actually, I might get back into fixing up hndis pages in the near future, so I might really find your compact index handy after all. Thanks for letting me know about it.
4102:
will produce new, better approaches to some aspects of subdivision. Someone (a better documenter than i) should refactor, summarize, and formalize the accumulated wisdom.
3156:
You might also mention that it seems to work well for such large bio Dab pages to be organized into sections for bios w/ related cause of notability, which is distinctly
3936: 3927: 3883: 3794: 3769: 3725:
_ _ There are three categories of non-English-alphabet characters that you may want to think about (if only to say "My, that's interesting", and set them on your mental
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You say "Wow! You even fixed the spelling of the German quote!" (the small one; the longer one in the notes section could use some help as well, (probably: soliten-: -->
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If you wikify the graaf sisters article. then the article will stay tough the only thing needed is for it to be wikifyed,) and yes the sisters are hoooot;);P/matrix17
2232:
Thanks very much. If my memory is accurate, there is already one in the archive of my talk page. Now I have a spare, or one for my desktop and one for my laptop ;-)
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What I was saying is: "It seems to me that this is (still) a 'disambig page', because (in the 'See also' section) it contains stuff about things other than people."
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that would be super tho far from expected. Hmm, a plan is shaping up here, and when i carry it out, i'll alert those interested on that tk pg, & invite anyone to
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No need for thanks. My respect goes to anyone who avoids Word, as I do. I caught it by using the "Live spellcheck" wikipedia tool, not much thought needed for that.
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By the way, do you claim that "The attacks of September 11, 2001 are the most serious..." is grammatical? If not, why take out the statement of fact that it isn't?
3823:, but IMO reflecting that knowledge in our sorting of names would be sheer folly, and i am wasting no time considering whether it could make any visible difference. 3745: 3717: 1541: 5827: 3657:
a title are probably Euro-culture people with Irwin as given name (and thus deserve a strong presumption of a bad Cat pipe). In contrast, Irwit Lee (unless in the
2521: 626:
It is very difficult to respond to your complaint without knowing which articles have annoyed you. Please provide a few examples. Please note that WP:DATE states "
123: 5498:
Did I tell that because of an article that I wrote in Knowledge, I got an all expense paid trip to the state of Georgia this last May? If I didn't check this out:
3598: 1733: 519: 490: 236: 5455: 4732:, please affix the template {{hangon}} to the page, and put a note on its talk page. If the article has already been deleted, see the advice and instructions at 3892: 2355: 2324: 365: 91: 5712: 5694: 5680:
Actually, I'm copying this over to the technical village pump. I'd still be interested in your views, and sorry for the stream of consciousness outpouring! :-)
3296:
Gosh, i had already forgotten our previous, immediately preceding discussion on this page! I should look at the history of the Dal page before saying any more!
2008: 758:
Just wonderinng if you saw the in use tag...I was on a major overhaul of the article, and much work that I did was lost because of your edit. Thanks, anyway. --
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If you need me (Senators) to help you with anything I am glad to, such as reviews, article checks and general assistance. Contact me on my talk page for help.
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up as you normally do with such pages, I'd have an example to follow (and possibly questions to ask :)). This is not at all urgent, however. Thanks much!—
4906:
Those were great photos in that book last night. What was the photographer called -- Something Kurata? Kurata something? Dunno. Oh well, let's try 'Kurata'.
4643: 4444: 4004:
are immaterial to your alpha-tool's operation. I tried to do a good job of mergin in names from Calva to the end, but a check by you would be a great thing.
3481:
scrolling thru about 10 (on average) of 20 screenfuls of about 25 entries each, looking probably at the last name (if you are disciplined) or the last few,
3337:; i've gotta run, but i'll take responsibility to merge the two conflict edits in the next 12 hours. After that, i'd be grateful for an alpha check. ARRGH! 2725: 2236: 572:, so you might want to have a look there and suggest a consistent way forward. Would help for people like me who followed the Player manual of style anyway 5630:
Well, I could be wrong. Seems to me, though, that if there are multiple defensible targets for a redirect, that states a case for a disambig page. Cheers!
5404: 4600: 4571: 4341: 4331: 4070: 3991: 3843:
I may have misled myself in thinking that Old English words (other than edh) tend to be transliterated with the Dh version; perhaps that actually reflects
3697: 3357:. I've now restored your Giordano additions that i clobbered, fixed my temp heading "Gion - Gion" , and in a few cases done lo-res trmnlgy on your entries. 2629: 1825: 919: 869: 4297:. I'm less surprised that i had completely forgotten abt it, than that i removed one tag and ignored the other. Probably a cautionary tale abt previewing 1354:
I have only awarded two of the rare No. 1 Medals and it is my pleasure to award this one to you for your dedication and hard work in the Pedia. Tkae care
5823: 5684: 5667: 5569: 5551: 5272: 5241: 5191: 5183:
Do whatever you feel is needed. You obviously know what you are talking about. By the way, did you ever see the discussion (which I've lost) that led to
5178: 4078: 2718:, or at a new page, but I think it might be useful to set out the something which explains why biographical articles need hatnotes to assist the reader. 2376: 5984:- It certainly does. (Also, I now understand your previous reply!!) Thank you for going to so much effort to enlighten me. Most appreciated. Regards, 5342: 4991: 4872: 4859: 4845: 5207:
I have adjusted to state the bare facts of the problem. I think it foolish to sacrifice grammar to the faults of our software; but others may differ.
4519:
I did promise some of my friends a couple of articles and as a good Marine I will keep my promise. To my friends here, Thank you for your friendship.
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thousands more ships that have served since the late 1700s, and it seems for every blue link on the list of US navy ships page, there are 5 red ones.
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on how to make a new page. Anyway, enough for now. And thanks very much for the links you left... I'm going to need them sooner or later! Take care,
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Is there any WP mechanism to support/ensure/enforce consistency? (Given that these two pages are not consistent with each other, I would guess not!)
5914:
I think we must be talking at cross purposes; i.e. I think you think I'm saying something completely different from what I think I'm trying to say.
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Hi, hoping to solicit you from nowhere as an objective third party. You've been chosen purely on the basis of (a) being the last contributor to the
2264: 1953: 255:(I wrote that one) but, you are right, I will add on when the revolt came to an end (I bet you're goning to read about the revolt (smile)). Cheers 6128: 5130: 4752: 3567: 3383: 3366:
In the meantime, my eyes have glazed over from manual alph checking, and a run on this page is likely to be valuable in cleaning up. Thanks again,
2905: 2655: 2508: 2490: 2472: 2372: 2286: 2158: 2052: 2004:
I answered on Perzkelly's page. Strangely enough, a collision on the same article as the smashup I had with Pinay06 last month! What are the odds?
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I should write your counterpoint, too. You will have better context watching it (than I did) now that you've read about it. It's very patriotic! --
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After the sterling effort of your previous replies to my questions, I'm happy to give you credit for whatever you would wish to be credited with!
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Thanks very much for that. I will. Funny ... the move page gives the opposite impression (I must read it more thoroughly next time). Toodle pip!
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_ _ As to Bennet & Bennett, i have three sets of comments: how i'd have edited the section if i'd taken note of it and given it the time; re
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into a LoPbN heading. I'd have left it as it was, and i think you've shown that you'll grasp my reasoning (whether or not we end up agreeing).
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you also think it shouldn't be included I can drop it, but if you're in agreement with me I'll be slightly more inclined to pursue it further.
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thus "ye" is correctly pronounced like "yee", for the ye in "ye scribes and Pharisees", but like "the" or "thee" in those "ye olde ..." usages.
3561: 3376: 3347: 3327: 3268: 3181: 2097: 6092:(Many Americans pronounce names the way they appear, and think there are 4 syllables in Cholmondeley, so at least give me credit for asking). 5674: 5537: 4469: 4330:
from the Park disambig. page. Since this link leads to another disambig with five written links, maybe it's notable for the Park page anyway?
3111:. And i see that your Special:Allpages lk has something in the half-thousand ballpark of relevant articles and Rdrs. I didn't track down that 6112:
We call ourselves Ozzies, and our major cities are pronounced: Sinny, Mel-bn, Briz-bn, Ad-lade and Can-brǔ (i.e. u-as-in-up, not u-as-in-you)
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at least partly because of an English/metric confusion, when even American scientific enterprises use metric exclusively, yet the recent
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for FA since it passed GA and FAC peer review. I wondering if you could take a look at it and maybe tie up any loose ends grammar-wise.
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Hi Chris — thanks for the Barnstar by the way — I've been checking for words mis-scanned from public domain scanned books E.B.1911,
4373:) the civil rights movement was not only an African-American thing. The civil rights movement involved people of all colors and races. 4369:
Thank you Chris, I really enjoyed writing the article. The amazing thing that I wanted to point out is that unlike popular belief (see:
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Chris, please check if an article is preceded by a coloured 'In use' box before editing it. This will help avoid edit conflicts. Thanks
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In Australia, yes. (I can't comment with any reliability on what happens elsewhere.) In fact, it's often shortened too. (i.e. Fair-bn)
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joke about the student who's disappointed that encyclopedia volumes from the school library don't circulate, because he wants to learn
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rather than two. We'll see. And finally, thinking abt templatizing them so that they do more self-reformating when subdivision occurs.
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were actually my reversions of that user's vandalism of a biography of a cricketer. This user (and the same vandalism from IP address
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The MoS is a guideline only, although not of course to be disregarded lightly, and I happen not to agree with that small part of it.
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Thanks! We will use Eskaya for both plural and singular, so I will check. Is it okey if I have you go over my other articles, too? --
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And now a question for you. Is the second syllable in Fairbairn usually unstressed, causing it to be pronounced much like Fairburn?
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the thot that at least for a while most of the enlightenment will flow from experienced to newer ones, but doubtless at some point
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Sorry about that editing comment, I was just surprised those problems hadn't been edited out yet. I'll read the articles. Thanks!
1348: 620: 314: 176: 6116:(We tend to get amused when we hear visitors refer to "you oss-sies", Mel-born, Briss-bain, A-del-aide/Ad-el-aide and Can-berra.) 4177: 4135: 4107: 2455:- Thanks as always. I will remember. (fixed: Respect other people's views!) Most likely, you will find exactly the same errors in 1040: 352:
Our office (Tourism) will be coordinating the Memorial Day Event. That means that we will contacting you around the month March.l
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That little matter aside, I'm a bit puzzled by what you're doing in "articles" such as this. I see them very much as disambigs:
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Thanks for the spelling corrections. But I think now we could use your help against those Vandals who will want to REVERT - for
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Good call, i think. (He sounds familiar, and there's a good chance you were fixing a clerical error by me. Thanks in any case!)
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Add groups to the current subsection, until adding the next group would bring it over the largest acceptable subs-section size.
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disambigs, though, when there's no dispute until my edits are reverted without explanation. I better learn how to be psychic.
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talk page, and because the self-penned bio on your user page seems to qualify you as capable enough to offer a contribution.
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Thank you Chris, for checking out the Major Fernando Rodriguez Vargas article. I just wrote an article on Brigadier General
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have requested them. I would agree with removing them at some point in the near future, but even that could be debatable. —
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Remember, it is only living people, unfortuntately, and there is no guarantee any particular article is correctly sorted.
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as the result. If you were doing this with automation, you may want to check your code. Hope that helps, happy editing! ++
4891:: I hadn't been aware that Kurata was ever a given name. But perhaps my memory is going. Could you give me an example? -- 4149:
immediately follows. (Stronger still is the analogous tendency of editors adding 3-or-more-letter names beginning Ma to a
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Chris, thanks for letting me know. I want to share something with you. Sometime ago I wrote the articles about Captains
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trump this concern? You seem to have given this a lot of thought, so I look forward to hearing what you think. Thanks.
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Chris, thanks for the spell check of LSm. I must have a mental block about proceeds, I've misspelled it more than once.
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Hi, I added the website with the names of the members of the Eidechsenbund to the other references under External links
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Foreign letters that have a standard two-letter English transliteration: ß; Œ œ; Æ æ; Þ þ (upper and lower case
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for Good Article status, so could you please check or review the article and if you can add anything to it please do.
4608: 4066:$ $ $ No, I didn't ask about bullet headings, I'm still chewing on the reading assignments you've already provided. 2245: 1839: 1233: 823:
Hi Chris, saw your edits in the articles. Thanks! BTW, is & acceptable? There are several in the sub-sections in
278: 2341:- sorry to revert over your addition, but it looked like I was the only one that noticed the vandalism. Thanks. -- 5747: 5653: 3047: 1815: 361:
According to them, I'll be invited to the unveiling on Memorial Day next May 2007. Pretty cool, don't you think?
3463:
was not an index-only page with a couple of dozen pages sprawling out over three levels below it in the tree, but
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Thank you, kind man. May your tribe increase! Lol! Hope the peer review will see more than you did! - kidding. --
639:
It was not a complaint and I'm not annoyed, but it sure sounds as if you're annoyed by my comment. WP:DATE states
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I am glad to help. Please let me know if you have any questions or doubts about any use of English in Knowledge.
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raised a chuckle; I'm afraid I may have been guilty of contributing to such situations at one time or another!)
5947:
If you know that some of these are generally called simply "Fairbairn", then I would completely change the page.
4925:. My objections may well have been answered elsewhere; you (singular, plural) are welcome to point me there. -- 2069:
Hits me - i could have sworn its "faciliate". Well, I'm german native, so thanks for improving my english ;-) --
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the supposed Y in expressions like "Ye olde curiosity shoppe" is a late typographical convention for thorn, and
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Hey there, Chris. Can you do the honor of cleaning up the future Philippine President's page? LoL! Thanks. --
905:
Of course I need your help! Thanks, can you put that in the article talk page? hehehe Thanks and take care! --
375:
Hey Chris, how you doing? Could you please take a look at one of articles and do your thing? This is the one
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for your diligent efforts and untiring assistance to my Philippine-related articles. Keep up the good work! --
1074:
Hey...how've you been? Thanks for the spell check. You saved my eyes! Okey, I will check on that "neopian". --
710:
Both articles contained "On the 19th", while WP:DATE states: "Do not use ordinal suffixes". OK, back to work!
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Start an RC patrol, perhaps single-handedly, based not on Recent changes, but on Related Changes: bookmark
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Thanks for the offer. For now, the only thing I can think of is reverting vandalism while I'm asleep. ;-)
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FYI, I have nominated this article for deletion; I noticed you had edited earlier. You can discuss it at
201:
representative and general)". I will look over the situations for James and Nicholas and get back to you.
5866:"It does not help to add disambig or hndis tags where the page only contains people who share a surname." 5357:
And mandating metric-only for non-U.S. Knowledge articles won't help much. NASA lost the US$ 328 million
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But conversely, he call the car/feline a jag-u-ar, and our tallest mountain (hill? 7000ft) Koz-i-oss-ko!
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Your addition of the people surnamed Bennet actually called for a "People named Bennet" secn hdg, which
3819:
Again just for the record, IJ and ij are the upper and lower case forms of a single Dutch letter, as in
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The "human editors" line was not at all harsh. Thanks for your response, and happy editing via Opera! -
4738:
Please note, this bot is only informing you of the nomination for speedy deletion, it did not nominate
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Hey Chris, how you doing? I recently read about an interesting person and decided to write about her,
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Yehey! Congratulations!!! I'll find you more to do! hehehe! Well, I must say, I'm glad I found you! --
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One other thing i forgot to include, and in fact i've forgotten whether it was on my mind bcz of the
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I'm not sure that your changes got saved. What were they? I'm sorry if I somehow stomped on them.
4011:$ $ $ Right, the bullet headings do no harm; I checked the page, and there were only a few to fix. 3255:
pattern, which usually means a rightly named heading miscoded so that it ends up at the wrong level.
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It doesn't bother me that you've changed it to a 'surname page'. I am just a little confused as to
5005:. So I agree with you. But am I right that we DO include a comma when the date is after the month? 4749: 4696: 4559:. If you are interested in the deletion discussion, please participate by adding your comments at 4267: 3848: 2866: 2091: 1662:
to all members of Knowledge that Chris the speller has corrected my god-awful spelling on the page
888:
which is currently GA nominee. Please do the honors, too, of checking for misspelling. Maybe also
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I plan to live long, prosper, and edit, edit, edit. To do otherwise would be highly illogical. ;-)
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I've been thinking. (No rude comments thank you, no matter how justified the comments may be ... )
4888: 5886:(However, I'm not about to "die in a ditch" either opposing your POV, or supporting my POV! ;-) ) 5585:
look for on a disambiguation page, you may have your cake and eat it too. I'll move the entry to
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_ _ Well, not a perfect weekend, but one worth the effort. Hope yours was at least as satisfying.
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No problem. Fixing the spelling is easily done twice, especially using the live spellcheck tool.
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A Google search suggests that the plaster style is sometimes referred to simply as "Veneziano".
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As for the Loboc Children's Choir, they were the interpreter or singer of "On Angels Wings"...--
2204:
Chris, for fixing all the spelling mistakes, I award the Minor Barnstar. Keep up the good work!
6105:
Australians notice all the syllables, but then tend to shorten some and drop others. Examples:
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than a serious edit. Get some expirience before getting into disputed disambigs. Best wishes.--
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Knowledge talk:WikiProject Biography#Sortkey and birth/death categories standardization project
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Another place that might be interesting to apply it is on Cat pages that are descendants of
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of a higher risk of being mispronounced like the "th" of "think". (I think i stated on the
3618: 3611:; it might be worth considering smartening it up enough to distinguish in many cases among 3008:
Because of your dedication and your excellent work in Knowledge, I have inducted you to my
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if you dont have anything special to do please wikify The graaf sisters article/matrix17
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Thanks a bunch for having edited the de Feure article. And that was pretty damn quick too!
2036: 1875: 1851: 1685: 1492: 687: 470: 2625:. The numbering is still 1 to 4. I hope you'll appreciate them! Happy vandal fighting! -- 2589:! You can of course continue to use the old test templates, but please give a shot of our 607:
You have changed the dates on several articles lately from ] to ] with an edit summary of
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Thanks for spelling corrections, they are nicer than criticizing bad English... Cheers !
1671: 1481: 1344:, the very rare "No.1" Medal for your dedication and hard work in Knowledge - well done! 1329: 98: 6109:
Few would know about Chumley; most would probably pronounce it something like Ch-mond-ly
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is a particularly good example because that page/list contains two entries, whereas the
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Does your tool make sure entries are in the correct alpha relationship to the headings?!
3832:("also spelt edh or eð" per WP), Ð and ð. These stand out for the following reasons: 273:
They have supplied me with info and clipboards on some of the women I've written about.
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Finally, could you assist me in a couple of moves associated with this. I want to move "
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Thanks in advance for any pointers. I'm watching your page to follow any replies. :) --
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I answered on matrix17's talk page. LOVELY PICTURES on the external links, by the way.
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already. Thanks for pointing it out. WordPerfect spellcheck let "Monastary" slip by.
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In an ideal world, there would be some sort of cross-reference/cross-link between the
4031:$ $ $ No, not at this time, but that check seems feasible to add in the near future. 3765:$ $ $ A planned enhancement will take care of these, but there have been rather few. 3713:$ $ $ I am surprised there are not more. You and Slyguy may congratulate yourselves. 5858: 5577: 5503: 5499: 5489: 5461: 5049: 5031: 5021: 4728:
To contest the tagging and request that administrators wait before possibly deleting
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Repeat 3 & 4 on successive subsections until each entry is included in a section.
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I follow and appreciate the reasoning, but I'm not convinced. I've written my ideas
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Hi Chris, how do we go about fixing up approx. 148 (found by Google) occurrences of
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page (which is likely to then rapidly grow as a page of Ma... names, competing with
105:
too late to prevent that, as my grammar police impulse already feels wounded. (Ow.)
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If you have any questions you can contact me at . You can also write to my e-mail.
308: 3651:
the people whose surnames really come before their given names (like Mao Tse-tung)
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I really don't have anything to say except I'm sorry. Thanks for not biting me. --
2013:
Indeed...surprise comes in "colored boxes"! Well, it brought us together, so...--
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Obviously you're under no compulsion to get involved in any way. Regards anyhoo,
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Thats a relief - nah those two - my favourite subjects will get to them later...
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etc. and fixing them up. Here's a few erroneous words I've found and corrected:
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it for GA (or hopefully FA) status. Could you give it a look? Take your time...
2674:. To be honest, I can't really say I feel strongly about the issue, however the 540: 46:
If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
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I wish you and your loved ones all the happiness in the world this coming year.
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not a 1Lt. Thank you for bringing the surname thing to my attention. Cheers!
2310:
Thanks for the spell check. I'll remember this "occurence" in the future. :-)
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Unless you can provide at least spome reference to your edits, It's rather a
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Much work has been done on this lately, Chris. Please spell check. Thanks. --
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disambiguation page as the company is commonly known by the name "Starkey."
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The surname pages sometimes start to accumulate every editor's great-uncle
4711:
from Knowledge. The tag claims that it should be speedily deleted because
2779:
Countries that wanted Chris to leave so bad they issued him a passport: US
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I see no articles on that page that deserve to be called simply Fairbairn
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Always glad to help anyone who is genuinely trying to improve wikipedia.
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Chris, you found my mis-spell almost instantly! How you do that? Thanks
1055:
Hey Chris, how's it goin? Please spell check this article. Thank you. --
5369: 5174:. The last two disambiguated more than just names. What happens there? 4935: 4926: 4910: 4892: 4794: 4770: 4704: 4436:, I would request that you please comment about this new request here: 4327: 4308: 4275: 4253: 4207: 4050: 3971: 3820: 3677: 3554: 3419:
But this has gone too far already, and i'm not evey sure you've caught
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Thank you for correcting all my spelling mistakes, it must be annoing.
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Knowledge:Reference_desk/Language#"All_of_which"_to_start_a_sentence_??
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if you have any questions about this or any problems with this bot. --
1436: 953:
Hi Chris. How are you? Here's an additional list of articles for you:
6023: 6009: 6001: 5859: 5578: 5475: 4415: 3758:). These correspond to ss, Oe, oe, Ae, ae, Th, and th, respectively. 2365: 1293: 5589:
and set up a proper disambiguation page for other meanings. Cheers!
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Thank you Chris. You just made him President of the Philippines! --
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I note that you changed the former to the latter in the article at
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Chris. thank you for doing your thing, I like what you did. About
5118:
Thanks for the follow up comments on my talk page. I created the
3250:(section), the name of the highest of the jammed-together levels: 5386: 5335:
Knowledge talk:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Metric/SI only
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I noticed that you removed links to the not-yet-written articles
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It's actually on PROD not AfD... The problem is no assertion per
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fits the criteria for speedy deletion for the following reason:
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attempted it in nearly 3 years. This relates to your comment on
3987:$ $ $ If you see me creating a trail of mistakes, let me know. 5770: 5765: 5758: 5171: 5167: 5163: 5052:, and it appears to be very similar to another wikipedia page: 4762: 3594:$ $ $ I have already done all of "R" and have started on "S". 3259:
passing up the chance to shift to the design choice of, e.g., "
3101: 2743: 1751: 1744: 1565: 1028:}} to their talk page with a friendly message. Happy editing! 824: 752: 412:
For dedication to improving and expanding Knowledge. Good job!
5925:
the only non-people articles are a few in the See also section
5349:
Don't you think we're being punished enough just by having to
4438:
http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Counter-insurgency#Requested_move
4184:, editing that talk, and replacement of the entire content of 5159: 4110:, and looking beyond that edit in a slightly larger context. 3755: 3020: 884:
Hey Chris! You still editing? I forgot about my own article
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Hey Chris! Thanks! You will see my articles in my userpage
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Sorry, I know it's Sunday, but here's more for you! Also
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article as a stub and added it to the main section of the
4465:
I used Google to search for these words in Knowledge. –
4000:
Taking up your offer: I'm guessing the bullet headings at
641:"If the topic itself concerns a specific country, editors 4178:
User:Jerzy/LoPbN Tools#Markup for Revising Links template
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I've just made a mess by overriding you in an Ed Conf on
3186:
_ _ I applaud your interest and perception, reflected in
2741:: - can u just do a quick check, in case? thanks much! 1036:
Knot nesesary. Ime happie two asisst with a miner phlaw.
6057:
Once again, thanks for the enlightenment. (Your comment
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So, I'm not altogether sure I agree with your statement
5769:
the last time I consulted it). If you could just clean
3840:
that LoPbN alph reflects the Dh transliteration (FWIW).)
3052:
I subdivided the Dala - Dale & Dalr - Daly secns of
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This is another one from me today. Thanks in advance. --
902:
really??? I can't believe in me anymore! hehehe Pinay06
5488:
Just dropping by to see how a my good friend is doing.
4359:. Could you look the article over for errors? Thanks. 3142:
_ _ If i've missed an implicit question, ask me again.
1844:
List of people of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary
1623:
Don't mention it. I'll watch everything; take a break!
5474:
Thank you for your help, I've understood my mistakes.
4491:? Is there an automated or semi-automated method? — 2371:
Hi Chris, your reversions of my edits to Nick Dyer by
2291:
There wasn't much room for improvement. Glad to help.
5048:. I have perfomed a web search with the contents of 3790:$ $ $ Yes, I saw this with Ernst Roehm, no problem. 101:), so I make lots of fixes. I also hate bad grammar. 5810:
Thanks from Oliver (moved from user page and signed)
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Chris, these four are currently being nominated for
1892:
Let me check on this Chris. Thank you, as always. --
1613:
Thanks for the corrction, Its time to hit the hay!--
1032:
re: corected speling on the B-17 page...thanck you.
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page. Does WP have a functionality to support this?
5935:
If I had been ... and taken some or all of them out
5931:
contain references to "people who share a surname".
5668:
User:Carcharoth/List of living people compact index
4761:Why is it at {given name} instead of {name} - e.g. 4551:An article that you have been involved in editing, 4428:There has been a new request to change the name of 4163:With an eye to the foreseeable future, i looked at 1262:
Sorry. You've gone through this already. My bad. --
855:Congrats on number 10,000! Live long and prosper. 186:" to "James Sykes (governor)." And I want to move " 5764:Hi, Chris! Could you, please, take a look at the 5737:and thought you could take part in answering it. 5001:Dear Chris, I misread the sentence with "put" on 4114:As you found it, the headings deserved tweaking: 4095:disappearance from all the versions of the list. 3553:to implement: you've got a big change in mind. -- 2855:Just to welcome you and thank you for your helps. 686:However, in the two articles that caught my eye, 6124:I think the American expression is "go figure"? 6000:There are several "hndis" situations within the 4707:, another Knowledge user, requesting that it be 4618:) show the progress of our discussions to date. 4087:Talk:List of people by name/Intra-page structure 3862:of, mostly, the upper and lower Eth characters: 3130:Talk:List of people by name/Intra-page structure 2166:Universitaeten), but I am not as sure about it. 232:Done. Glad to help. Another impressive article. 108:If you look at what is presently section 1.3 of 3353:In case you haven't experienced it before, see 1410:Don't mention it. I gave it another shot, too. 277:written (You can also do your thing), they are 5162:to 'surname', but wasn't sure what to do with 131:I discovered a page that may get us an answer 5994:Relationship(s) between "surname" and "hndis" 5882:"It's a surname article, not a disambig page" 5844:(Adding an old date to allow auto archiving) 5796:Ëzhiki (Igels Hérissonovich Ïzhakoff-Amursky) 5775:Ëzhiki (Igels Hérissonovich Ïzhakoff-Amursky) 5003:Knowledge:Manual of Style (dates and numbers) 4599:A couple of months ago an anonymous IP added 2974:Very sorry hadnt realise there were so many! 2697:Knowledge talk:Hatnotes#The_case_for_hatnotes 4388:Sure, I'll look into it. Chris, I nominated 3828:The modern Icelandic and Old English letter 3666:of your colleagues to evaluate and correct). 3572:Sounds like an excellent tool. Suggestions: 3056:. I'll comment soon on your other questions. 2031:Dude, no worries. Thanks for the spelling.- 1911:lyric poetry — made Bonfouca their haunt." 924:You got that pretty fast, man. Nicely done. 920:Declaration of Independence Vandalism Repair 645:to use the date format used in that country" 555:Good job! :-) 16:14, 14 November 2006 (UTC) 285:. It is fun interacting with you. Cheers! 6012:page/list only contains one of the Andrews. 4961:Chris, to my best knowledge the Zimbo Trio 3275:(two-word given name, no surname involved). 2637:Thanks. I have already started using them. 1241:This should be due for your "scrutiny" now. 5921:- Sorry, I don't understand what you mean. 5869:Well yes, I agree, but this page does not 1690:Hello Chris, thank you for spell-checking 1148:Hey Chris, thanks...Since you already did 4561:Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Omnitopia 3648:failure to reorder the name in the piping 3404:But colleagues now seem scared of change, 2187: 1642: 1189: 538: 395: 327:Re: Puerto Ricans in Philadelphia, Thanks 3398:And monks, and monarchs and their heirs: 3019: 2495:A million million thanks...Till next! -- 2145:Thank you again...what more do I say? -- 1564: 1335: 1292: 1127:I am considering nominating the article 315:Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Laromlab 177:James Williams (Delaware representative) 5222:if you continue to disagree, I commend 4424:Counter-insurgency to Counterinsurgency 4085:_ _ I suggest you add a new section on 3805:Just for the record, i understand that 135:. I will be watching there as well. -- 14: 5941:but then ... so they could go back in. 5166:(includes link to a gang and a film), 4340:Reason at talk:Park(disamb) accepted. 4182:Template talk:List of people Ben Links 3439:-- but i'll call the approach a level 2529:List of songs penned by J. Roel Lungay 2320:I'm surrrre it won't occurrrrr again. 973:. Please do the honors...Thank you. -- 570:Knowledge:WikiProject Football/Players 515:(I answered again on Cor's talk page) 44:Do not edit the contents of this page. 3568:Automated alphabetical-order checking 3160:what LoPbN is designed to deal with. 3138:harmless, albeit pathetic, drudgehood 2126:Chris, pls spell check. Thank you. -- 92:"All of which" to start a sentence ?? 6084:If so, I could add a See also entry. 5876:"contain people who share a surname" 4744:Feel free to leave a message on the 4199:User:Jerzy/Argus for LoPbN Templates 3410:Hey! Hist'ry page shows loss or gain 2706:I'm not sure whether it shoud be at 406:The Random Acts of Kindness Barnstar 25: 4235:Start work on the first subsection. 4197:, which didn't make it onto either 3188:your addition of "People named ..." 2695:Hi Chris, I just saw your reply at 2407:Thanks for fixing my refering-: --> 1574:Happy New Year from Tony the Marine 283:Corsican immigration to Puerto Rico 23: 5937:- Sorry, again I don't understand. 5326:Knowledge:Village pump (proposals) 5044:This is an automated message from 5036: 4687: 4638:Botswana and professional football 4475:Multiple mis-spellings of Portrait 4456:Dictionary of Australian Biography 1011:has smiled at you! Smiles promote 1000: 564:Opening paragraphs for footballers 220:Puerto Rican women in the military 24: 6139: 6071:Fairbairn vs Fairburn (vs Fairbn) 4979:Biographical project notification 4186:Template:List of people Ben Links 3317:! I see careful thought at work. 2691:Hatnotes on biographical articles 2408:referring typo, I appreciate it. 2246:Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary 1840:Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary 549:The Tireless Contributor Barnstar 279:French immigration to Puerto Rico 3614:the typos in the Cat piping (or 3395:Popes and patriarchs everywhere, 3392:Ebb and flow in those with airs: 3313:Nice work on the subdivision of 3096:, AFAI can see. And you created 2339:Talk:Cardiff City F.C.#My_revert 2188: 1643: 1322:Merry Christmas in 100 languages 1190: 539: 486:(I answered on Cor's talk page) 396: 29: 5658:Would you have time to look at 4155:List of people by name: Maa-Mab 4002:List of people by name: Caa-Cal 3429:List of people by name: Hoa-Hoe 3335:List of people by name: Gim-Giz 3315:List of people by name: Gim-Giz 3100:subsequently. You also mention 3054:List of people by name: Daa-Dam 2273:, Muchas Gracias! Thank you! -- 1838:Hi Chris, here's more for you: 5570:18:50, 23 September 2007 (UTC) 5552:15:21, 23 September 2007 (UTC) 5538:14:18, 23 September 2007 (UTC) 4695:Hello, this is a message from 4371:American Civil Rights movement 3384:Level Jams and Level Straddles 3261:List of people by name: Hal... 260:01:41, 29 September 2006 (UTC) 237:00:54, 29 September 2006 (UTC) 227:18:58, 28 September 2006 (UTC) 13: 1: 5729:I asked a question regarding 5507:04:10, 9 September 2007 (UTC) 5493:03:04, 9 September 2007 (UTC) 5479:05:57, 6 September 2007 (UTC) 5456:16:54, 2 September 2007 (UTC) 5446:11:40, 2 September 2007 (UTC) 5420:04:20, 2 September 2007 (UTC) 4390:Puerto Ricans in World War II 4195:List of people by name: Brown 4176:. This required pasting from 3407:And act as if i edit strange. 2994:23:23, 27 February 2007 (UTC) 2982:23:20, 27 February 2007 (UTC) 2967:22:54, 27 February 2007 (UTC) 2948:23:28, 24 February 2007 (UTC) 2939:23:17, 24 February 2007 (UTC) 2752:Philippine Tarsier Foundation 1542:17:13, 31 December 2006 (UTC) 1532:17:06, 31 December 2006 (UTC) 1511:16:30, 31 December 2006 (UTC) 1506:If you can help - Great!!! -- 1485:18:34, 29 December 2006 (UTC) 1469:02:20, 29 December 2006 (UTC) 1453:05:00, 22 December 2006 (UTC) 1415:23:04, 28 December 2006 (UTC) 1398:22:53, 28 December 2006 (UTC) 1385:00:47, 22 December 2006 (UTC) 1375:00:02, 22 December 2006 (UTC) 1359:17:16, 21 December 2006 (UTC) 1349:17:16, 21 December 2006 (UTC) 1312:23:55, 20 December 2006 (UTC) 1276:00:12, 21 December 2006 (UTC) 1257:23:43, 20 December 2006 (UTC) 1224:18:21, 20 December 2006 (UTC) 1200:The Philippine Barnstar Award 1178:03:02, 20 December 2006 (UTC) 1136:02:55, 20 December 2006 (UTC) 1116:02:31, 19 December 2006 (UTC) 1088:02:24, 19 December 2006 (UTC) 1069:18:31, 18 December 2006 (UTC) 1050:Philippine Tarsier Foundation 1041:02:57, 15 December 2006 (UTC) 988:18:48, 14 December 2006 (UTC) 978:16:57, 14 December 2006 (UTC) 940:06:38, 13 December 2006 (UTC) 910:04:39, 13 December 2006 (UTC) 897:04:13, 13 December 2006 (UTC) 870:00:32, 13 December 2006 (UTC) 860:00:21, 13 December 2006 (UTC) 841:00:15, 13 December 2006 (UTC) 832:23:50, 12 December 2006 (UTC) 818:22:45, 12 December 2006 (UTC) 811:Philippine Tarsier Foundation 783:22:27, 12 December 2006 (UTC) 774:21:30, 12 December 2006 (UTC) 763:19:13, 12 December 2006 (UTC) 731:02:28, 25 November 2006 (UTC) 715:23:35, 17 November 2006 (UTC) 699:23:19, 17 November 2006 (UTC) 670:22:58, 17 November 2006 (UTC) 652:21:11, 17 November 2006 (UTC) 635:16:54, 17 November 2006 (UTC) 621:12:30, 17 November 2006 (UTC) 595:18:01, 15 November 2006 (UTC) 577:08:58, 15 November 2006 (UTC) 437:(signing an unsigned comment) 206:23:02, 1 September 2006 (UTC) 188:Nicholas Van Dyke (1769-1826) 158:22:53, 1 September 2006 (UTC) 6129:10:43, 5 November 2007 (UTC) 6097:19:48, 4 November 2007 (UTC) 6066:10:43, 5 November 2007 (UTC) 6052:19:48, 4 November 2007 (UTC) 6038:09:55, 4 November 2007 (UTC) 5989:18:20, 3 November 2007 (UTC) 5976:18:09, 3 November 2007 (UTC) 5965:17:10, 3 November 2007 (UTC) 5909:16:09, 3 November 2007 (UTC) 5893:07:09, 3 November 2007 (UTC) 5804:14:48, 16 October 2007 (UTC) 5783:21:31, 15 October 2007 (UTC) 5753:08:46, 13 October 2007 (UTC) 5713:06:46, 13 October 2007 (UTC) 5704:05:43, 13 October 2007 (UTC) 5695:05:41, 13 October 2007 (UTC) 5685:05:17, 13 October 2007 (UTC) 5675:05:15, 13 October 2007 (UTC) 4983:In case you are interested: 4555:, has been listed by me for 4174:List of people by name: Benn 3136:the principles buried in my 2923:18:48, 9 February 2007 (UTC) 2906:23:33, 6 February 2007 (UTC) 2887:17:37, 6 February 2007 (UTC) 2860:16:51, 4 February 2007 (UTC) 2837:22:19, 3 February 2007 (UTC) 2815:21:04, 1 February 2007 (UTC) 2801:21:00, 1 February 2007 (UTC) 2788:00:27, 30 January 2007 (UTC) 2772:21:11, 29 January 2007 (UTC) 2726:21:47, 28 January 2007 (UTC) 2699:. Thanks for your support! 2684:20:45, 27 January 2007 (UTC) 2659:05:24, 26 January 2007 (UTC) 2642:23:06, 22 January 2007 (UTC) 2632:22:56, 22 January 2007 (UTC) 2569:22:44, 22 January 2007 (UTC) 2545:17:55, 21 January 2007 (UTC) 2509:22:25, 22 January 2007 (UTC) 2491:17:36, 21 January 2007 (UTC) 2473:17:32, 21 January 2007 (UTC) 2446:23:47, 20 January 2007 (UTC) 2413:17:18, 20 January 2007 (UTC) 2396:23:01, 19 January 2007 (UTC) 2385:19:07, 19 January 2007 (UTC) 2356:20:59, 18 January 2007 (UTC) 2346:20:26, 18 January 2007 (UTC) 2325:01:51, 17 January 2007 (UTC) 2315:01:48, 17 January 2007 (UTC) 2296:02:35, 13 January 2007 (UTC) 2287:02:30, 13 January 2007 (UTC) 2265:23:07, 12 January 2007 (UTC) 2237:02:51, 12 January 2007 (UTC) 2224:23:34, 11 January 2007 (UTC) 2171:02:37, 12 January 2007 (UTC) 2159:01:48, 12 January 2007 (UTC) 2140:23:39, 10 January 2007 (UTC) 1653:The TomStar81 Spelling Award 1152:, you might also like to do 747:20:42, 6 December 2006 (UTC) 520:17:57, 7 November 2006 (UTC) 506:10:39, 7 November 2006 (UTC) 491:17:11, 4 November 2006 (UTC) 481:09:23, 4 November 2006 (UTC) 464:01:33, 2 November 2006 (UTC) 443:23:11, 31 October 2006 (UTC) 417:02:26, 31 October 2006 (UTC) 384:02:09, 30 October 2006 (UTC) 377:Fernando E. Rodriguez Vargas 366:21:18, 21 October 2006 (UTC) 7: 5646:02:44, 7 October 2007 (UTC) 5626:02:31, 7 October 2007 (UTC) 5605:02:11, 7 October 2007 (UTC) 5441:- how's that for courtesy? 5405:23:15, 29 August 2007 (UTC) 5394:20:32, 29 August 2007 (UTC) 5376:01:49, 24 August 2007 (UTC) 5343:22:33, 23 August 2007 (UTC) 5315:23:29, 23 August 2007 (UTC) 5297:22:41, 23 August 2007 (UTC) 5273:18:08, 16 August 2007 (UTC) 5258:17:59, 16 August 2007 (UTC) 5242:17:41, 16 August 2007 (UTC) 5217:17:40, 16 August 2007 (UTC) 5192:15:24, 14 August 2007 (UTC) 5179:14:54, 14 August 2007 (UTC) 5149:14:42, 14 August 2007 (UTC) 5131:04:14, 14 August 2007 (UTC) 5113:22:16, 13 August 2007 (UTC) 5069:01:18, 12 August 2007 (UTC) 5026:21:19, 11 August 2007 (UTC) 4818:External links on dab pages 4699:. A tag has been placed on 3271:or the nonexistent rap DJ, 2111:00:41, 9 January 2007 (UTC) 2101:00:37, 9 January 2007 (UTC) 2084:05:34, 8 January 2007 (UTC) 2074:05:26, 8 January 2007 (UTC) 2053:02:34, 9 January 2007 (UTC) 2027:06:54, 7 January 2007 (UTC) 2009:06:45, 7 January 2007 (UTC) 1999:06:23, 7 January 2007 (UTC) 1976:17:22, 6 January 2007 (UTC) 1954:10:29, 6 January 2007 (UTC) 1927:10:08, 6 January 2007 (UTC) 1906:01:38, 6 January 2007 (UTC) 1887:01:33, 6 January 2007 (UTC) 1868:21:44, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1826:17:49, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1816:17:07, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1797:06:04, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1779:05:54, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1768:05:19, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1734:19:46, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1708:05:36, 5 January 2007 (UTC) 1676:22:51, 2 January 2007 (UTC) 1628:02:38, 2 January 2007 (UTC) 1618:02:34, 2 January 2007 (UTC) 1600:02:04, 1 January 2007 (UTC) 358:Adrián J. Pacheco Suárez 322:09:40, 6 October 2006 (UTC) 301:02:05, 6 October 2006 (UTC) 290:16:50, 5 October 2006 (UTC) 268:Re:Carmen Durnier's husband 195:21:35, 27 August 2006 (UTC) 140:18:55, 15 August 2006 (UTC) 124:08:09, 14 August 2006 (UTC) 18:User talk:Chris the speller 10: 6144: 6088:Good point. Yes, I agree. 5949:- Sorry, don't understand. 5320:Let's punish the Americans 5283:Please don't canvass. See 5096:(disambiguation page) per 5090:Starkey Hearing Foundation 5062:the maintainer's talk page 4582:) 05:10, May 9, 2007 (UTC) 4470:04:54, 23 April 2007 (UTC) 4450:Spelling/mis-scanned words 4445:08:25, 22 April 2007 (UTC) 4419:14:55, 17 April 2007 (UTC) 4345:14:36, 27 March 2007 (UTC) 4335:15:41, 26 March 2007 (UTC) 4316:20:19, 20 March 2007 (UTC) 4283:19:29, 16 March 2007 (UTC) 4261:20:26, 12 March 2007 (UTC) 4215:08:25, 12 March 2007 (UTC) 4151:List of people by name: Ma 3562:07:10, 18 March 2007 (UTC) 3461:List of people by name: Ma 3377:02:45, 16 March 2007 (UTC) 3348:21:15, 15 March 2007 (UTC) 3328:20:04, 15 March 2007 (UTC) 2721:Would you be intersted? -- 2165:wenn, Uniuersitaeten-: --> 1958:Will relay the message to 1464:you fixed my spelling.... 1393:thanks for the spell fix. 5849:20:59, 24 June 2007 (UTC) 4992:14:04, 18 July 2007 (UTC) 4974:18:07, 13 June 2007 (UTC) 4939:01:28, 12 June 2007 (UTC) 4930:07:01, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4914:04:03, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4896:03:28, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4873:03:42, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4860:03:34, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4846:03:22, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4831:03:20, 11 June 2007 (UTC) 4610:plus the conversation at 4397:16:51, 9 April 2007 (UTC) 4378:03:56, 4 April 2007 (UTC) 4364:22:32, 3 April 2007 (UTC) 4071:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 4058:22:35, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 4036:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 4016:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3992:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3979:20:55, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3945:Hreiðar Már Sigurðsson 3924:Hreiðar Már Sigurðsson 3795:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3770:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3746:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3718:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3698:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3685:06:09, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3638:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3599:23:10, 7 March 2007 (UTC) 3401:I've linked a lot today! 3307:19:34, 6 March 2007 (UTC) 3293:19:31, 6 March 2007 (UTC) 3171:20:50, 4 March 2007 (UTC) 3153:20:02, 4 March 2007 (UTC) 3094:List of people named Dale 3082:Dale (part of place name) 3067:11:31, 4 March 2007 (UTC) 3016:21:30, 2 March 2007 (UTC) 2676:Oxford English Dictionary 2194: 1750:Hi Chris. We are back to 1649: 1208:Philippine Barnstar Award 1196: 609:"date format per WP:DATE" 545: 402: 110:Sam Harris (author)#Islam 6014:Two questions/comments: 5654:Given names and surnames 5451:Better late than never. 5287:for more information. -- 4810:04:44, 8 June 2007 (UTC) 4786:02:09, 8 June 2007 (UTC) 4753:00:20, 8 June 2007 (UTC) 4746:bot operator's talk page 4677:19:07, 3 June 2007 (UTC) 4663:19:02, 27 May 2007 (UTC) 4646:? Did you get hacked? -- 4632:11:04, 21 May 2007 (UTC) 4404:Ramón Emeterio Betances 4305:(archived w/o response). 4127:only as far as necessary 4079:... and its enhancements 3911:Eiður Smári Guðjonsen 1716:Discussion: Lizard Union 1696:Discussion: Lizard Union 4539:04:15, 8 May 2007 (UTC) 4524:00:22, 8 May 2007 (UTC) 4510:chastizing going on in 4496:04:05, 4 May 2007 (UTC) 4303:note to him at the time 3915:Björk Guðmundsdóttir 3355:Knowledge:Edit conflict 3218:Daley as whole surname 3072:_ _ OK, yr talking abt 2828:Your Mystical Awareness 2580:New vandalism templates 1962:, Chris. Thank you...-- 1476:Thanks for the heads-up 1366:Do you need assistance? 1235:Social Weather Stations 1206:I hereby give you this 1123:Good Article Nominating 1097:Social Weather Stations 379:. Thanks a lot buddy. 248:Reinaldo Deliz-Santiago 184:James Sykes (physician) 5834:) 20:58, June 24, 2007 5664:Category:Living people 5381:Re:Unreferenced claims 5041: 4791:No apologies necessary 4692: 3459:to January 2004, when 3039: 2337:Please see my note at 1698:Labbas 4 January 2007 1569: 1351: 1302: 1005: 5515:Whirlpool Corporation 5333:Let's all go over to 5324:Originally posted to 5040: 5012:: ||October 20, 1976 4691: 3548:scope, on one of the 3123:Experts on Everything 3048:Dale, a disambig page 3023: 2459:. I just know it. -- 1724:comment was added by 1586:comment was added by 1568: 1339: 1296: 1004: 930:comment was added by 692:USS Atakapa (ATF-149) 337:Humbert Roque Versace 116:questions end here.) 42:of past discussions. 5359:Mars Climate Orbiter 5120:Starkey Laboratories 5086:Starkey Laboratories 4918:Thanks for the link. 4740:Kirsten (given name) 4730:Kirsten (given name) 4713:Kirsten (given name) 4701:Kirsten (given name) 4683:Kirsten (given name) 4165:Cat LP for Bennet... 3928:Hermann Hreiðarsson 2666:publically/ publicly 2121:Divine Word Seminary 1876:St. Genevieve Church 1852:St. Genevieve Church 1493:Occupied territories 688:USS Arikara (ATF-98) 342:Dear Tony Santiago: 170:Assistance requested 5904:page. Let me know. 5587:Veneziano (surname) 4750:Android Mouse Bot 2 3962:Björn Þórðarson 3958:Björn Þórdharson 3521:(Holme subsections) 3510:(Hoffm subsections) 3499:(Hobbs subsections) 3212:People named Daley 3177:Section hierarchies 3134:document for others 3107:, a funky name for 2783:That's great!! :-) 2531:. Thanks much! -- 2432:for me? Thanks. -- 2424:Please spell-check 2380:mind you. Regards, 2164:sollten, wean-: --> 1427:Season's Greetings! 1164:...Thanks again. -- 99:The Sondheim Review 5154:Update: I changed 5042: 4889:this edit of yours 4693: 4642:Hi. What happened 4605:I (disambiguation) 4601:lowercase I prefix 4588:I (disambiguation) 4544:AfD nomination of 4505: 4430:Counter-insurgency 4384:RE:Placido Acevedo 4326:I see You deleted 4301:. FWIW, i wrote a 3902:Eiður Guðjohnsen 3535:(Howa subsections) 3182:"People named ..." 3040: 3038: 3030: 2756:Philippine Tarsier 2198:The Minor Barnstar 2035:Perez posted from 1571: 1570: 1559: 1557:(Feliz Año Nuevo) 1552: 1352: 1304: 1303: 1301: 1288: 1006: 949:additional request 807:Philippine Tarsier 793:Spellcheck request 6094:Chris the speller 6049:Chris the speller 5973:Chris the speller 5906:Chris the speller 5846:Chris the speller 5836: 5822:comment added by 5751: 5701:Chris the speller 5692:Chris the speller 5549:Chris the speller 5500:David M. Gonzales 5453:Chris the speller 5417:Chris the speller 5402:Chris the speller 5353:the damn system? 5340:Chris the speller 5313: 5271: 5256: 5240: 5215: 5050:Smirnov (surname) 5032:Smirnov (surname) 5024: 4584: 4570:comment added by 4501: 4434:Counterinsurgency 4068:Chris the speller 4033:Chris the speller 4013:Chris the speller 3989:Chris the speller 3954:Jón Þorláksson 3792:Chris the speller 3767:Chris the speller 3743:Chris the speller 3715:Chris the speller 3695:Chris the speller 3635:Chris the speller 3596:Chris the speller 3215:Daley as surname 3090:Dale (given name) 3035:Chris the speller 3032: 3024: 2943:CSD tag removed! 2798:Chris the speller 2639:Chris the speller 2566:Chris the speller 2564:. ;-) That's OK. 2560:I think you mean 2522:José Roel Lungay 2377:User:88.111.25.84 2353:Chris the speller 2333:Cardiff City F.C. 2322:Chris the speller 2293:Chris the speller 2234:Chris the speller 2229: 2228: 2168:Chris the speller 2108:Chris the speller 2081:Chris the speller 2006:Chris the speller 1938:User talk:Pinay06 1884:Chris the speller 1823:Chris the speller 1776:Chris the speller 1737: 1720:—The preceding 1705:Chris the speller 1681: 1680: 1664:USS Texas (BB-35) 1625:Chris the speller 1603: 1582:—The preceding 1563: 1555: 1550: 1539:Chris the speller 1525:Haghpat Monastery 1519:Haghpat Monastery 1412:Chris the speller 1382:Chris the speller 1342:Chris the speller 1297: 1291: 1284: 1229: 1228: 1154:Dagohoy Rebellion 1038:Chris the speller 963:Francisco Dagohoy 959:Dagohoy Rebellion 943: 926:—The preceding 892:? Thanks much! -- 867:Chris the speller 827:. Let me know. -- 813:. Best regards!-- 712:Chris the speller 667:Chris the speller 632:Chris the speller 592:Chris the speller 559: 558: 517:Chris the speller 488:Chris the speller 438: 422: 421: 355:Have a nice day, 234:Chris the speller 203:Chris the speller 155:Chris the speller 87: 86: 54: 53: 48:current talk page 6135: 6043:Answer to 1: No. 6020:Andrew Fairbairn 6006:Andrew Fairbairn 5835: 5816: 5741: 5638: 5618: 5597: 5543:(refactored per 5470: 5464: 5303: 5294: 5267: 5252: 5236: 5232:over reversion. 5231: 5225: 5211: 5020: 4709:speedily deleted 4697:an automated bot 4657: 4652: 4583: 4564: 3937:Oddsson, Davíð 3893:Sigurður Eggerz 3623: 3617: 3529:People named How 3465:a 55 K-byte list 3427:_ _ Looking now 3413:In edits anyway. 2868:Francis Escudero 2672:Kelvin MacKenzie 2624: 2618: 2614: 2608: 2604: 2598: 2271:Maraming Salamat 2222: 2192: 2185: 2184: 2092:Georges de Feure 1719: 1647: 1640: 1639: 1581: 1529:House of Scandal 1194: 1187: 1186: 1162:Tamblot Uprising 971:Tamblot Uprising 955:Panaghoy sa Suba 925: 890:Sandugo Festival 543: 536: 535: 436: 400: 393: 392: 68: 56: 55: 33: 32: 26: 6143: 6142: 6138: 6137: 6136: 6134: 6133: 6132: 6073: 5996: 5982:Hope this helps 5863: 5817: 5812: 5762: 5739:Lord Sesshomaru 5727: 5656: 5632: 5612: 5591: 5582: 5518: 5504:Tony the Marine 5490:Tony the Marine 5486: 5472: 5468: 5462: 5413: 5383: 5356: 5322: 5292: 5281: 5265:Septentrionalis 5250:Septentrionalis 5234:Septentrionalis 5229: 5223: 5209:Septentrionalis 5202: 5139: 5082: 5035: 5013: 4999: 4981: 4951: 4885: 4820: 4725: 4686: 4670: 4653: 4648: 4640: 4590: 4565: 4549: 4536:Tony the Marine 4531: 4521:Tony the Marine 4516:going through. 4507: 4477: 4452: 4426: 4411:Tony the Marine 4407: 4394:Tony the Marine 4386: 4375:Tony the Marine 4361:Tony the Marine 4353: 4324: 4291: 4270: 4081: 3884:Bróðir of Man 3849:the Moddey Dhoo 3838:LoPbN root page 3621: 3615: 3609:Category:People 3570: 3453:linear searches 3433:Reader's Digest 3386: 3184: 3179: 3050: 3045: 3013:Tony the Marine 3010:"Wall of Honor" 3006: 2957: 2932: 2916: 2871: 2850: 2830: 2781: 2748:Chocolate Hills 2735: 2723:BrownHairedGirl 2693: 2668: 2652: 2622: 2616: 2612: 2606: 2602: 2596: 2582: 2554: 2552:Thanks for that 2525: 2457:Chorus Paulinus 2430:Chorus Paulinus 2422: 2405: 2369: 2335: 2308: 2249: 2205: 2183: 2124: 2094: 2067: 2037:Perezkelly talk 1992: 1879: 1854:. Thank you. -- 1848:Paring Bol-anon 1836: 1809: 1748: 1688: 1638: 1611: 1609:WW 1 Casualties 1554: 1523:I took care of 1521: 1496: 1478: 1462: 1429: 1368: 1356:Tony the Marine 1346:Tony the Marine 1334: 1309:Tony the Marine 1299:Tony the Marine 1290: 1238: 1185: 1146: 1125: 1100: 1053: 1030: 998: 951: 922: 882: 853: 803:Chocolate Hills 795: 756: 740: 724: 605: 566: 534: 473: 461:Tony the Marine 457:Ruben A. Cubero 453: 429: 391: 381:Tony the Marine 373: 363:Tony the Marine 329: 311: 298:Tony the Marine 287:Tony the Marine 270: 257:Tony the Marine 253:Jayuya Uprising 224:Tony the Marine 216: 172: 94: 64: 30: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 6141: 6122: 6121: 6114: 6113: 6110: 6100: 6099: 6086: 6085: 6078: 6077: 6072: 6069: 6055: 6054: 6044: 6031: 6030: 6027: 6013: 5999: 5995: 5992: 5979: 5978: 5951: 5950: 5944: 5938: 5932: 5922: 5912: 5911: 5887: 5885: 5879: 5868: 5862: 5857: 5856: 5855: 5854: 5853: 5852: 5851: 5811: 5808: 5807: 5806: 5761: 5756: 5731:hatnotes over 5726: 5723: 5722: 5721: 5720: 5719: 5718: 5717: 5716: 5715: 5655: 5652: 5651: 5650: 5649: 5648: 5581: 5576: 5575: 5574: 5573: 5572: 5517: 5511: 5510: 5509: 5485: 5482: 5471: 5460: 5459: 5458: 5438: 5437: 5429: 5428: 5412: 5409: 5408: 5407: 5382: 5379: 5354: 5347: 5346: 5321: 5318: 5280: 5279:Metric/SI only 5277: 5276: 5275: 5245: 5244: 5201: 5200:Just the facts 5198: 5197: 5196: 5195: 5194: 5138: 5135: 5134: 5133: 5081: 5072: 5066:CorenSearchBot 5046:CorenSearchBot 5034: 5029: 5007: 4998: 4995: 4980: 4977: 4959: 4958: 4950: 4947: 4946: 4945: 4944: 4943: 4942: 4941: 4919: 4902: 4884: 4881: 4880: 4879: 4878: 4877: 4876: 4875: 4819: 4816: 4815: 4814: 4813: 4812: 4795:Justin (koavf) 4771:Justin (koavf) 4727: 4718: 4716: 4685: 4680: 4669: 4666: 4639: 4636: 4589: 4586: 4563:. Thank you. 4548: 4542: 4530: 4527: 4506: 4499: 4476: 4473: 4451: 4448: 4425: 4422: 4406: 4400: 4385: 4382: 4381: 4380: 4352: 4349: 4348: 4347: 4323: 4320: 4318: 4306: 4290: 4289:Importance tag 4287: 4285: 4273: 4269: 4266: 4265: 4264: 4263: 4251: 4247: 4244: 4243: 4242: 4239: 4236: 4233: 4227: 4226: 4217: 4205: 4203: 4169: 4168: 4161: 4160: 4159: 4146: 4145: 4144: 4132: 4131: 4130: 4122: 4118: 4105: 4103: 4096: 4084: 4080: 4077: 4076: 4075: 4074: 4073: 4060: 4047: 4046: 4041: 4040: 4039: 4038: 4026: 4025: 4021: 4020: 4019: 4018: 4006: 4005: 3997: 3996: 3995: 3994: 3981: 3969: 3965: 3964: 3947: 3939: 3930: 3917: 3904: 3895: 3886: 3877: 3859: 3858: 3857: 3856: 3852: 3841: 3826: 3825: 3824: 3817: 3816: 3815: 3812: 3809: 3800: 3799: 3798: 3797: 3785: 3784: 3783: 3782: 3775: 3774: 3773: 3772: 3760: 3759: 3751: 3750: 3749: 3748: 3736: 3735: 3723: 3722: 3721: 3720: 3707: 3703: 3702: 3701: 3700: 3687: 3674: 3673: 3669: 3668: 3667: 3653: 3652: 3649: 3643: 3642: 3641: 3640: 3628: 3627: 3626: 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2572: 2571: 2553: 2550: 2524: 2519: 2516: 2515: 2514: 2513: 2512: 2511: 2421: 2418: 2404: 2401: 2389: 2373:User:Inspire62 2368: 2362: 2359: 2358: 2334: 2331: 2328: 2327: 2307: 2306:March for Life 2304: 2301: 2300: 2299: 2298: 2248: 2243: 2240: 2239: 2227: 2226: 2221: 2201: 2200: 2195: 2193: 2182: 2181:Minor Barnstar 2179: 2176: 2175: 2174: 2173: 2123: 2118: 2116: 2114: 2113: 2106:I enjoyed it. 2093: 2090: 2087: 2086: 2066: 2063: 2060: 2059: 2058: 2057: 2056: 2055: 1991: 1988: 1985: 1984: 1983: 1982: 1981: 1980: 1979: 1978: 1915: 1914: 1913: 1912: 1878: 1873: 1835: 1832: 1829: 1828: 1808: 1805: 1802: 1801: 1800: 1799: 1747: 1742: 1739: 1738: 1711: 1710: 1687: 1684: 1679: 1678: 1656: 1655: 1650: 1648: 1637: 1634: 1631: 1630: 1610: 1607: 1561: 1553: 1551:Happy New Year 1548: 1545: 1544: 1520: 1517: 1514: 1513: 1495: 1490: 1482:Silence(water) 1477: 1474: 1461: 1458: 1428: 1425: 1422: 1421: 1420: 1419: 1418: 1417: 1403: 1402: 1401: 1400: 1388: 1387: 1367: 1364: 1333: 1328: 1325: 1324: 1317: 1289: 1282: 1279: 1278: 1237: 1232: 1227: 1226: 1203: 1202: 1197: 1195: 1184: 1181: 1145: 1139: 1129:Ford BA Falcon 1124: 1121: 1099: 1094: 1091: 1090: 1052: 1047: 1044: 1043: 999: 997: 994: 991: 990: 950: 947: 932:130.207.39.100 921: 918: 915: 914: 913: 912: 881: 876: 873: 872: 852: 849: 846: 845: 844: 843: 794: 791: 788: 787: 786: 785: 755: 750: 739: 736: 723: 720: 708: 707: 706: 705: 704: 703: 702: 701: 677: 676: 675: 674: 673: 672: 657: 656: 655: 654: 604: 601: 598: 597: 565: 562: 557: 556: 552: 551: 546: 544: 533: 530: 527: 526: 525: 524: 523: 522: 500: 499: 494: 493: 472: 469: 452: 449: 446: 445: 428: 425: 420: 419: 409: 408: 403: 401: 390: 387: 372: 369: 328: 325: 310: 307: 304: 303: 269: 266: 263: 262: 242: 240: 239: 215: 212: 209: 208: 171: 168: 165: 164: 163: 162: 161: 160: 145: 144: 143: 142: 93: 90: 85: 84: 79: 74: 69: 62: 52: 51: 34: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6140: 6131: 6130: 6127: 6119: 6118: 6117: 6111: 6108: 6107: 6106: 6103: 6098: 6095: 6091: 6090: 6089: 6083: 6082: 6081: 6075: 6074: 6068: 6067: 6064: 6060: 6053: 6050: 6045: 6042: 6041: 6040: 6039: 6036: 6028: 6025: 6022:page and the 6021: 6017: 6016: 6015: 6011: 6007: 6003: 5991: 5990: 5987: 5983: 5977: 5974: 5969: 5968: 5967: 5966: 5963: 5959: 5954: 5948: 5945: 5942: 5939: 5936: 5933: 5930: 5926: 5923: 5920: 5917: 5916: 5915: 5910: 5907: 5902: 5897: 5896: 5895: 5894: 5891: 5883: 5877: 5874: 5873: 5867: 5861: 5850: 5847: 5843: 5842: 5841: 5840: 5839: 5838: 5837: 5833: 5829: 5825: 5821: 5805: 5801: 5797: 5792: 5787: 5786: 5785: 5784: 5780: 5776: 5772: 5767: 5760: 5755: 5754: 5749: 5745: 5740: 5736: 5734: 5714: 5711: 5707: 5706: 5705: 5702: 5698: 5697: 5696: 5693: 5688: 5687: 5686: 5683: 5679: 5678: 5677: 5676: 5673: 5669: 5665: 5661: 5647: 5644: 5643: 5639: 5637: 5636: 5629: 5628: 5627: 5624: 5623: 5619: 5617: 5616: 5609: 5608: 5607: 5606: 5603: 5602: 5598: 5596: 5595: 5588: 5580: 5571: 5568: 5564: 5560: 5555: 5554: 5553: 5550: 5546: 5542: 5541: 5540: 5539: 5536: 5532: 5528: 5524: 5516: 5508: 5505: 5501: 5497: 5496: 5495: 5494: 5491: 5484:Friendly chat 5481: 5480: 5477: 5467: 5457: 5454: 5450: 5449: 5448: 5447: 5444: 5435: 5431: 5430: 5425: 5424: 5423: 5421: 5418: 5406: 5403: 5398: 5397: 5396: 5395: 5392: 5388: 5378: 5377: 5374: 5371: 5366: 5365: 5360: 5352: 5345: 5344: 5341: 5336: 5331: 5330: 5329: 5327: 5317: 5316: 5311: 5307: 5299: 5298: 5295: 5290: 5286: 5274: 5270: 5266: 5262: 5261: 5260: 5259: 5255: 5251: 5243: 5239: 5235: 5228: 5221: 5220: 5219: 5218: 5214: 5210: 5205: 5193: 5190: 5186: 5182: 5181: 5180: 5177: 5173: 5169: 5165: 5161: 5157: 5153: 5152: 5151: 5150: 5147: 5143: 5132: 5129: 5125: 5121: 5117: 5116: 5115: 5114: 5111: 5107: 5101: 5099: 5095: 5091: 5087: 5080: 5076: 5071: 5070: 5067: 5063: 5057: 5055: 5051: 5047: 5039: 5033: 5028: 5027: 5023: 5018: 5011: 5006: 5004: 4994: 4993: 4990: 4986: 4976: 4975: 4972: 4968: 4964: 4956: 4955: 4954: 4940: 4937: 4933: 4932: 4931: 4928: 4924: 4920: 4917: 4916: 4915: 4912: 4907: 4903: 4900: 4899: 4898: 4897: 4894: 4890: 4874: 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4268:von Heeremann 4262: 4259: 4255: 4248: 4245: 4240: 4237: 4234: 4231: 4230: 4229: 4228: 4224: 4220: 4219: 4218: 4216: 4213: 4209: 4200: 4196: 4191: 4187: 4183: 4179: 4175: 4166: 4162: 4156: 4152: 4147: 4142: 4141: 4140: 4139: 4137: 4133: 4128: 4123: 4119: 4116: 4115: 4113: 4112: 4111: 4109: 4101: 4100:many eyeballs 4093: 4088: 4072: 4069: 4065: 4064: 4063: 4062: 4061: 4059: 4056: 4052: 4043: 4042: 4037: 4034: 4030: 4029: 4028: 4027: 4023: 4022: 4017: 4014: 4010: 4009: 4008: 4007: 4003: 3999: 3998: 3993: 3990: 3986: 3985: 3984: 3983: 3982: 3980: 3977: 3973: 3963: 3959: 3955: 3951: 3948: 3946: 3943: 3940: 3938: 3934: 3931: 3929: 3925: 3921: 3918: 3916: 3912: 3908: 3905: 3903: 3899: 3896: 3894: 3890: 3887: 3885: 3881: 3878: 3876: 3872: 3868: 3865: 3864: 3863: 3853: 3850: 3846: 3842: 3839: 3834: 3833: 3831: 3827: 3822: 3818: 3813: 3810: 3807: 3806: 3804: 3803: 3802: 3801: 3796: 3793: 3789: 3788: 3787: 3786: 3779: 3778: 3777: 3776: 3771: 3768: 3764: 3763: 3762: 3761: 3757: 3753: 3752: 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2038: 2034: 2030: 2029: 2028: 2024: 2020: 2016: 2012: 2011: 2010: 2007: 2003: 2002: 2001: 2000: 1997: 1987: 1977: 1973: 1969: 1965: 1961: 1960:User:ChicogoN 1957: 1956: 1955: 1951: 1947: 1943: 1939: 1935: 1934: 1933: 1932: 1931: 1930: 1929: 1928: 1925: 1921: 1909: 1908: 1907: 1903: 1899: 1895: 1891: 1890: 1889: 1888: 1885: 1877: 1872: 1870: 1869: 1865: 1861: 1857: 1853: 1849: 1845: 1841: 1831: 1827: 1824: 1820: 1819: 1818: 1817: 1814: 1804: 1798: 1794: 1790: 1786: 1782: 1781: 1780: 1777: 1772: 1771: 1770: 1769: 1765: 1761: 1757: 1753: 1746: 1741: 1735: 1731: 1727: 1723: 1717: 1713: 1712: 1709: 1706: 1701: 1700: 1699: 1697: 1693: 1683: 1677: 1673: 1669: 1665: 1661: 1658: 1657: 1654: 1651: 1646: 1641: 1633: 1629: 1626: 1622: 1621: 1620: 1619: 1616: 1606: 1604: 1601: 1597: 1593: 1589: 1585: 1580: 1576: 1575: 1567: 1562: 1558: 1547: 1543: 1540: 1536: 1535: 1534: 1533: 1530: 1526: 1516: 1512: 1509: 1505: 1504: 1503: 1501: 1494: 1489: 1487: 1486: 1483: 1473: 1471: 1470: 1467: 1457: 1455: 1454: 1450: 1446: 1442: 1438: 1434: 1424: 1416: 1413: 1409: 1408: 1407: 1406: 1405: 1404: 1399: 1396: 1392: 1391: 1390: 1389: 1386: 1383: 1379: 1378: 1377: 1376: 1373: 1363: 1361: 1360: 1357: 1350: 1347: 1343: 1340:I award you, 1338: 1332: 1327: 1323: 1320: 1319: 1318: 1315: 1314: 1313: 1310: 1300: 1295: 1287: 1286:Feliz Navidad 1281: 1277: 1273: 1269: 1265: 1261: 1260: 1259: 1258: 1254: 1250: 1246: 1243:Thank you. -- 1242: 1236: 1231: 1225: 1221: 1217: 1213: 1209: 1205: 1204: 1201: 1198: 1193: 1188: 1180: 1179: 1175: 1171: 1167: 1163: 1159: 1155: 1151: 1144: 1138: 1137: 1134: 1130: 1120: 1118: 1117: 1113: 1109: 1105: 1098: 1093: 1089: 1085: 1081: 1077: 1073: 1072: 1071: 1070: 1066: 1062: 1058: 1051: 1046: 1042: 1039: 1035: 1034: 1033: 1029: 1027: 1023: 1019: 1014: 1010: 1003: 993: 989: 986: 982: 981: 980: 979: 976: 972: 968: 964: 960: 956: 946: 944: 941: 937: 933: 929: 917: 911: 908: 904: 903: 901: 900: 899: 898: 895: 891: 887: 880: 875: 871: 868: 864: 863: 862: 861: 858: 848: 842: 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Index

User talk:Chris the speller
archive
current talk page
Archive 1
Archive 2
Archive 3
Archive 4
Archive 5
The Sondheim Review
Sam Harris (author)#Islam
RayBirks
08:09, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
Knowledge:Reference_desk/Language#"All_of_which"_to_start_a_sentence_??
RayBirks
18:55, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
Chris the speller
22:53, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
James Williams (Delaware representative)
James Sykes (physician)
Nicholas Van Dyke (1769-1826)
stilltim
21:35, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
Chris the speller
23:02, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
Puerto Rican women in the military
Tony the Marine
18:58, 28 September 2006 (UTC)
Chris the speller
00:54, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
Reinaldo Deliz-Santiago

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