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User talk:Cuchullain/Archive 35

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need to be clear (probably with a section break) which aspects of their surviving stories are material made up by people like Marie de France and ChrĂ©tien de Troyes and Wolfram von Eschenbach later (and Thomas Mallory and Alfred Lord Tennyson later still, for that matter – being on the Continent vs. Great Britain isn't a wholly accurate dividing line, as some legit British legend remained in Breton tradition, while the later English rulers and people around them were mostly Norman French keenly interested in injecting French stuff into British legend). The same care needs to be taken here as with Irish mythology and the Christian layers placed on top of it. Doing this properly requires a high level of subject-matter expertise, as even many generally reliable sources on Arthurian works do not take sufficient care to separate Brythonic legend from Franco-Romance fiction (especially in works primarily concerned with the late medieval to modern form of the stories as literary works). Some of the stock characters by Mallory's time were entirely fictional and had sometimes directly displaced original Welsh characters, while others were just injected in the middle, sometimes with profound effects on the subject matter (e.g., Lancelot and the demonization of Guinevere as an adulteress).
1864:"A Welsh Classical Dictionary, people in History and Legend up to about A.D. 1000, was published by the National Library of Wales in 1993. In his introduction P.C. Bartrum refers to the volume as ‘a series of notes arranged alphabetically under personal names and a few place-names’ which ‘are the result of many years of working in the field of early Welsh history, legend and fiction, and are to some extent biased towards subjects which were of personal interest’ to him, with ‘a leaning towards genealogy and to the development of historical ideas’. He has attempted to ‘give the essential outlines of legends and fictions, generally telling the stories without comment, interpretation or speculation.’" 1285:
it seeking more sources that I have collected. The "Knanaya" page is giving much lies about the Knanaya community. Someone or some group is playing dirty game with your Encycloedia to tarnish the community. I believe it is not appropriate for an Encyclopedia. I don't want to "fight" with them. Many community members are upset with what they are doing with an Encyclopedia. So the Catholic Section of the Knanaya Community leaders requested me to help on this. That is why I used a different page with reliable and different matter. If you have question, please feel free to contact me.
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answer it. When I saw your reversion, I looked at the talk page, with its huge amount of minor contention, disagreement, requests for change, etc. Maybe the business about the "grid lines" belongs in another article. BTW, "grid" has many meanings, but it seems to me that the common one involves an orthogonal crossed-lines pattern, such as found on graph paper, city streets, etc. When I think of "grid", that's what first comes to mind, even though I'm quite familiar with the vertical spiral component of a vacuum tube, and of the amorphous nature of the electrical grid.
2253: 4157:. That discussion resulted in one reviewer initiating the new move and proposing the restoration of the full-scope title, while other reviewer also supported the full-scope title during the discussion on the proposed move. Proposals for full-scope title were actually supported by majority of participants, I hope that you noticed that. So please, would your take another look at the votes and then reconsider the final conclusion? I am addressing you on this subject, because such procedure is indicated on the 2420: 2380: 1467: 4272: 3892: 3362: 2398: 1477: 1052: 31: 4254: 3881: 3352: 2370: 1457: 1030: 4078: 1161: 4685: 3714:: I’ve never dealt with this before, and I thought I was following the protocol by contacting you first. The policy in question is “ was unaware of significant additional information not discussed”; actually, nothing significant was discussed, and the evidence presented was spurious. Further, I did not open this request. I merely stumbled upon it today and decided to follow up on it. I check this article from time to time for nonsense, and today was one of those days. 4658:
today's layout, it seems to me that the past existence of the crossed-lines pattern deserves some mention and explanation, if only because many old pictures of football fields (at least two in the Commons, but I don't know how to link to them here, plus many, but not all, in the 1905 book) show that pattern. I propose putting something about it in whatever article covers the history of American football. Assuming that it is properly presented, would you object to it?
2409: 4382: 3470: 2504: 1570: 1113: 1698: 2961: 4355: 3988: 3439: 2462: 1532: 1075: 4417: 4025: 1600: 4299: 3936: 3397: 2431: 1504: 2910: 382:: The move request was for a different location than where they were originally, and no one suggested moving back to that title, so it would not be appropriate to return it there. There also wasn't the level of support for returning to comma disambiguation in general that would lead me to move there over the arguments of the majority of participants who favored parenthetical disambiguation.-- 4243: 3870: 3341: 2359: 1446: 1019: 4235: 3862: 3333: 2351: 1438: 1011: 3649:
The person who called this a “made-up phrase” was making it up himself. Given the abundance of information available online for this topic, including numerous transcriptions and translations of primary sources, it boggles the mind that one article from a Catholic encyclopdia from 100 years was the sad bit of evidence presented, when there is so much legitimate scholarship on this topic.
3563:, and so far it's only drawn opposes, with some comments indicating the TV series may not be notable. If there are any in the group that are indisputably uncontroversial, feel free to move them back if you take the time to fix the redirects and incoming links, but otherwise it's better to err on the side of caution and bring them to RM.-- 4542:; after the introduction of the suggestion six hours after the discussion started, it appears that only the nominator objected to the idea, while several editors supported it. Would you be willing to revisit this decision, and/or clarify that another move request can be initiated? I'm not interested in taking this to 4752:
were certainly overall an improvement, but you left out the information that 19th-century Continental Europeans whose jobs brought them into common contact with foreign travelers often used "milord" to address indiscriminately any male English-speakers who seemed to be rich or upper-class. Most such
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There was quite a bit of energy and discussion around that removal. I won't disagree with restoring it, but there are waves of editors who show up on occasion attempting to radically alter the article. I just about worse myself out defending it on the talk page but got out-numbered. If you would like
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It's hard to say that “Sarum Rite” is the "common name" when the very footnotes in the article refer exclusively to “Sarum Use” in all the primary sources and academic secondary sources. Some of the popular articles use the phrase “Sarum Rite”; but non-academic chit-chats and the popular press are a
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Then go here for the (so-far) only full transcription of the so-called Old Ordinal: sarum-chant.ca, tab ‘More Documents’, ‘Ordinale Sarisburiensis’. Do the same searches, and you'll get the same results, including a long bibliography of all the primary sources that use the phrase in the title of the
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to the dab page, it would have broken all those links by sending them to the dab page. As I didn't have the time or inclination to fix them all myself, the simplest solution was to revert your bold move and put it to RM. It's a good thing I did, as the move was obviously controversial, looking at how
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Hi Bill; I just saw that you closed the proposed move over at "Magic (paranormal)". If you don't mind, I'd like to open up a Move Review regarding that decision. You stated that there was no consensus, but frankly I think that there is a very clear consensus. I originally suggested moving the page to
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Thank you for your reply. If you cannot verify my source, please ask me and I can send you proof. But please don't delete the whole matter as you did before. It is upsetting after many days of my hard work. The content I posted in "Knanaya Catholics" is different from "Knanaya". I am still working on
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Some of these are major proposals and may not go over well (even where they make the most sense, which a Gwenhwyfar split does not) if coming from an anon, especially if the IP address ever changes. That said, a mass merger is unlikely to be supportable, because there is virtually never going to be a
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That is as it should be, except for purely fictional elements added to the cycle, e.g. Lancelot, an invention of French writers and not found in any of the original British material; he's neither part of Welsh folklore nor British traditional history, but post-dates both. Articles on Guinevere, etc.,
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I was intending to do that once the template links weren't showing up. However, the real issue is that the article was moved through RM months ago and the redirect was never changed, leaving the base name redirecting to a disambiguated name. The lack of navigation is a worse problem than some broken
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Bill - I'm wondering why your removed the explanation of the long-ago shift from a cross-grid layout of the field to today's basically non-cross-grid layout. It addresses a question that a lot of people have, "why do they call it a grid?", and supplies some hard-to-find and long-forgotten history to
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I'm really curious what you mean by "fix broken links". Every move I did, I ensured double redirects were fixed and any important nav templates were updated to bypass the redirect. Now, there is some lag in that pages with those nav templates on them will still show in the whatlinkshere as pointing
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Sorry, but it's the truth. I am very tired of people who don't even have a basic understanding of a subject, no less familiarity with the leading scholars in the field making ridiculous edits that favor the fringiest of fringe sources. I would never even dream of editing an article on WP if I wasn't
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Dimadick, among Arthurian scholars, Bartrum (who passed not too long ago) is highly regarded as one of the premiere experts on medieval Welsh pedigrees/genealogies - in fact, his book Early Welsh Genealogical Texts remains the standard text on the subject - and his Welsh Classical Dictionary is also
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Natural disambiguation specifically means a "an alternative name that the subject is also commonly called". There's no evidence that this statue was ever called "Statue of Margaret Thatcher, Guildhall Art Gallery" in reliable sources, let alone enough to establish it as a common alternative name. In
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natural disambiguation (it fits a pattern of "very-specific-location-or-structure + comma + less-specific placename" found in natural-language English, though an argument has been made that it's not the most natural for British topics, because the more common British style is to use "in" rather than
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Those links were false positives caused by the caching problem with the nav templates I noted above. Also, people will invent controversy if given the chance. Those ppl know I moved the page BOLDly already, and didn't revert because I think they know the right course of action, but given the chance
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Nice work in boiling this now sprawling topic down to its encyclopedic essence. How would you feel about my giving it a bit of a copyediting polish. It's already in strong shape. I just see a few spots where the prose could be tighter or flow better. Would love to help you get it over the FA finish
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Also, to qualify as natural disambiguation, I think we'd need to see reliable sources using the same form. Otherwise it is simply an "unnatural" convention applied arbitrarily by Wikipedians to achieve necessary disambiguation — in which case we'd be better off using parenthetical disambiguation to
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I had a good quote from George Eliot that I was going to add to the article, but the bookmark fell out of the book, so now I have to go through the book to find it again (Google searches for "milord" in Eliot's writings seem to turn up bits from Daniel Deronda, which is not what I'm looking for).
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The term “rite” or “ritus” or any variation thereof is not found in the surviving Customaries or Ordinals of Sarum Use, anywhere. The only terms—used over and over and over again, for CENTURIES—are “secundum usum sarum” “ad usum sarum”, i.e., “according to the Use of Sarum”, or “in the Sarum Use”.
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I understand. Relisting sounds like a good compromise. I believe that the argument was based upon the building's relative notability as a hotel rather than the relative prominence of each search phrase. Since that's closer to an editorial decision on scope, it makes sense to want more evidence of
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Since you have edited a number of these articles in the past, whats your opinion on adding the infobox for "former countries" to ethnic, tribal and village organizations in the late prehistoric, protohistoric and early historic Florida and southeastern region? Another editor has begun adding the
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article and refuses to discuss it in the talk section. The issue is, (s)he keept trying to re-insert very fringe material about him being the "real" King Arthur that has literally zero support in the Arthurian scholarly community. In fact (and this is noted in Peter Batrum's essential and highly
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are clear that we prefer natural disambiguation when it is available; that often resolves to a comma-delimited construction when it comes to geographical names. That said, I don't have any issue with the "No move" result. This is something that should be settled by an RfC and made clearer in the
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on the dubious basis that there was a consensus to move the articles in favour of parenthetical disambiguation. There was no such consensus, as only two editors agreed to the move. Neither I nor the nominator of that move agreed with the parenthetical proposal, so I would argue that the articles
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is no longer an accurate title. To reiterate, there was a lack of consensus to move away from the present title - and given that parenthetical disambiguation is the default option on Knowledge, there'd need to be a clear consensus to restore comma disambiguation, not to mention consensus on the
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I have to disagree with your assertion that it would be inappropriate to move the articles back. To the contrary, it would be the most appropriate thing to do. There was absolutely no consensus for comma disambiguation at any point. Furthermore, it's quite misleading to state that a majority of
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I (just a bit reluctantly) have to agree with you. It looks like the original field didn't have the "grid" pattern, but that such a pattern came into being with a rules change. I hope you will agree that, to me and many others, "grid" calls up images of crossing lines. Even if "gridiron" means
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to keep this article on your watchlist, it would help the next time they return for another assault rather than me doing it alone which doesn't look good. There are apparently people who are True Believers in a Medieval Dark Age who see the article as revisionist nonsense or opinion essay. --
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Let's look at it under the comma-separated disambiguation rules, then. The material there clearly uses British examples, e.g. "Windsor, Berkshire". I.e., WP policy effectively overrules the idea that an ENGVAR case can be made against using the comma in such a case just because it's British.
490:, but I imagine he understood the article had to be moved, as the previous title was no longer correct, and reckoned the arguments of the two participants who explicitly backed parenthetical disambiguation to be strong enough to take that option. As I say, parentheses are the default option.-- 507:
They may be the default option, but as comma disambiguation is the norm I do think that BD2412 should have taken extra caution in moving the two articles. There is a consistency issue insofar as most statue-related articles use comma rather than parenthetical disambiguation. I guess I'm just
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False dichotomy; the euhemerization of historical figures (and even peoples) into legendary ones is a different process from invention of fictional characters. The continental material is mostly pure fiction from individual minds, and isn't legend, a cultural process, though some of it was
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Redirecting them would have created hundreds of broken links, and I didn't have time to fix them all. And honestly, I don't know that all of them are the right move. At this stage I think most of the ones I reverted are controversial enough that there should be an RM - I started an RM for
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you asked Netoholic to stop making massive movement in articles of telenovelas, but evidently it does not stop. Clearly this is something that must be discussed, but not in the way that the user does, because it is something conflicting. He has recently imposed his will on these articles:
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is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 10 December. All users who registered an account before Saturday, 28 October 2017, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Wednesday, 1 November 2017 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
1631:. It is requested that all administrators take some time during this month to help clear backlogs wherever possible. It should be noted that AIV reports are not always valid; however, they still need to be cleared, which may include needing to remind users on what qualifies as vandalism. 326:
A mass merger would probably be fine if it improved the sourcing in these articles. Very many of the character articles have no sources at all - I know, I wrote many of them back before inline citations were a requirement on Knowledge. Better to have one good article than dozens of bad
296:. It's highly unlikely that any of these characters have not been subject to in-depth coverage in multiple, independent reliable sources; e.g. Gawain alone has been the subject of literally hundreds of journal articles over the last century or so, and multiple entire non-fiction books. 3104:
They probably should have left it to an admin, but it's hard to argue against their rationale given the way the discussion went, as well as other recent discussions about using genre disambiguators. Definitely a line call. If you wish you can bring it up with the closer, and go to
3178:"Magic (study of religion)"; that wasn't very popular. However, there are at least eight statements of support that the article be instead moved to "Magic"; conversely, there was only one neutral statement and two in opposition. That's a pretty clear consensus in my book. 2682:: Of course! I'd appreciate any help you could offer. I'm in the middle of an unsaved edit I've been doing for a few days and plan to make another edit to address some of the concerns at the FA, but I'll wrap it up quickly and you can have at it. Thanks again.-- 419:
I get where you're coming from, but in this case I don't think moving back to a title that literally no one wanted (and where the previous consensus was to move away from) would be the best option. As was pointed out in that discussion, the statue is not in the
2865:: I agree with you, I don't think the infobox is an improvement, and when it replaces the ethnic group infobox, it removes more pertinent info like the language links. The dates also give false/misleading info in some cases. I'll remove the ones I can find.-- 1973:
As you've done various times in the past, you're escalating what was a fairly minor issue, even after it was resolved. It's time to deescalate now. I'm confident Dimadick can edit the article and others constructively, especially now that they have access to
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and so on. As far as I know this "convention" is not written down anywhere, so it's really just a case of seeing if we can get consensus to move them all to be in line with others. Note that the equivalent category for a US location uses parentheses already:
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has been added to the username policy which disallows usernames containing emoji, emoticons or otherwise "decorative" usernames, and usernames that use any non-language symbols. Administrators should discuss issues related to these types of usernames before
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a comma. Non-natural comma disambiguation is the use of a comma as a separator in a way that no one uses in natural English, e.g. the comma in "List of FooBars, A–M" (a style of subclassification borrowed from formalized governmental/military writing – "
536:, which means "an alternative name that the subject is also commonly called". Both the parenthetical and comma format are forms of non-natural disambiguation in this case, and the parenthetical version is the norm for articles that aren't place names.-- 3656:. Search on “usum” in each of the Latin or Latin-English customaries, and you will readily see how common this term is. Search on “ritus” or “ritu”, and you will find nothing. English “rite” was used to translated “obsequium”, which is too bad. 1132: 4565:. Though several people suggested it, I didn't see a strong consensus or argument for using "Silversmith Building". No one gave evidence that this was more common, for example. However, I can reopen the discussion and relist it if you like.-- 582:
geographic naming conventions, then handled for all the statue article with a mass technical move (whether that be to comma, parentheses, or otherwise – whatever the RfC concludes). I also don't care much, so I'm not going to write the RfC.
4344: 4145:, relating the recently reduced title of general article on anti-Eastern Orthodox sentiment, you decided to keep the reduced title, in spite of fact that majority of participants in the discussion supported the full-scope proposals like 3585:
to the old name, but that is temporary until those pages are "touched" again. I also did a great deal of AWB work fixing redirects that required extra attention. Is it your idea that after a move ALL pages MUST bypass the redirects? --
648:", etc.). RS won't regularly use the comma construction for these statues because they use "in", "at", or some other longer construction; i.e., the argument "show it to me in RS" applies just as much to your preference for parenthetic. 3831:
Sorry, I somehow missed the last round of discussion, but have been present for many previous ones. Something that long-standing and roundly discussed shouldn't have been changed without a much clearer consensus than appeared in that
4092:(Gangadhar Bhadani) passed away on 8 February 2018. Bhadani joined Knowledge in March 2005 and became an administrator in September 2005. While he was active, Bhadani was regarded as one of the most prolific Wikipedians from India. 2804: 1889:: I'll weigh in over at the article. Cagwinn is correct that the Arthurian connection is bupkis and that virtually nothing is known of Owain. However, the purported Arthurian connection should stay with proper critical sourcing.-- 3126:
Okay, thanks. I've popped something on their talk page. May take to move review, given that the naming guideline (which was changed whilst the discussion was underway) now specifically mentions that genre should not be used.
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Yeah, good catch. Looks like it was a search error on my part - I misspelled "Lowell station" so it turned up no results, whereas I got a few for Gallagher. However, when I Google News it now, I find a number using "Lowell
3969:. Under the proposal, if an administrator has not used their admin tools for a period of five years and is subsequently desysopped for inactivity, the administrator would have to file a new RfA in order to regain the tools. 1095: 1642:. This survey will be integral to gathering information about how this noticeboard works (i.e. which problems it deals with well and which problems it struggles with). If you would like to take this survey, please 769:
argument. The entire point of the RM and various others is to move toward a consistent disambiguation approach. I'm not even sure I care whether it's comma or parenthetical; the problem is veering between them.
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I think that's really reaching. Comma disambiguation is not the "norm" - while more statue articles may use it, enough use parentheses that there's no real consistency. The comma-disambiguated version is also not
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I didn't catch that the new RM was opened after the move review. That's fairly irregular, as it opened before the MR had closed. I'm convinced that there's a consensus to move (indeed, there's consensus against
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It appears that a number of articles in both those categories use parenthetical disambiguation, so I don't see this as much of a consistency problem, other than the problem that there is none. Not to speak for
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automatically applied to edits that blank a page, turn a page into a redirect, remove/replace almost all content in a page, undo an edit, or rollback an edit. These edits were previously denoted solely by
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should not have been to their present title in the first place. There is indeed a clear absence of consensus for the title of that article, and as such the comma-disambiguation ought to be brought back.--
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Why not just repoint the incdab redirects rather than wholesale reverting the moves themselves? Or why not let me know that the old redirects should be pointed to the DAB pages and let me fix it? --
2856: 1722:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 508:
repeating now, but I think a move review is the only way forward if BD2412 declines to reconsider the moves. For the record, neither statue is officially named "Statue of Margaret Thatcher", and per
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To achieve the necessary consistency we should probably soon look to start an RfC on all the other UK structures which are currently at comma disambiguated locations. For example the entries at
470:'s decision to close the move as if there was one was simply wrong. WP:MOVEREVIEW is a last resort, although I would like to hear BD2412 explain why he controversially moved the two articles.-- 2019:: See what you think now. Bartrum doesn't seem to say what "Danwyn" means, so please add something if you have it. Actually any additional sources you might have would be most appreciated.-- 2489: 675:
this title, both the comma form, and the parenthetical form, are constructed disambiguation necessitated only because there are articles on two statues of Margaret Thatcher with articles.--
4429: 4640:, it says the field is still called a "gridiron" in spite of, rather than because of the checkerboard pattern of the day, supporting the notion that the name came from the yard lines.-- 429:
disambiguation should actually be. Here, the consensus was the opposite. You can try move review if you wish, but you'd need to show that the close was out of process and the spirit of
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must disclose whether they have ever edited for pay and that administrators may never use administrative tools as part of any paid editing activity, except when they are acting as a
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held in high regard. The fact that you don't know this demonstrates that you have no business editing this article, or any others concerning early medieval Welsh historical figures.
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as "No move", on the basis that there is "a clear absence of consensus for the proposed moves", I should note that the two articles were only recently moved to their present titles
4206:, and both solutions are OK since they are covering the full scope of the article. Thank you for reopening the discussion, we need more participants on complex subjects like this. 158:; there's no real light between those versions of the character, and the Welsh Gwenhwyfar is every bit as legendary as the Continental versions (notably, her father was a giant).-- 2485: 608:
Natural disambiguation is preferred, but here, no one identified a natural disambiguation option. In this case, the comma is not natural disambiguation, so that's a moot point.--
4153:. I hope that you also saw what has happened recently, when the reduction of scope to "persecution" only was made without consensus. That was followed by move review discussion 4443:. This shows a chronologic history for two users on pages where they have both made edits, which may be helpful in identifying sockpuppetry and investigating editing disputes. 4394: 1516: 1033: 205:
Everything "Arthurian legend‎" (Knowledge category) is within "British traditional history" (and "Welsh folklore", too). Maybe it shouldn't, but it's as it is right now. --
730: 3534: 1684: 1222: 3678:: I closed the article as not moved, as your request had gotten no support and no one identified a title that was more common than the present one. You can take this to 2605: 2516: 1334:. And as I said before, it is something that should be discussed with the whole community and reach a consensus. But obviously it is something that worries and annoys.-- 4632:
They say it's talking about the parallel yard lines, not the "grid" pattern made with the yardlines crossed with the historical lengthwise lines. This makes sense, as
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I see it has been closed by a non-admin. Should such a controversial discussion been closed by a non-admin? Especially in view of the recent amended guideline at
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when placing page restrictions. Editors cannot be sanctioned for violations of page restrictions if this editnotice was not in place at the time of the violation.
1756: 373: 4329: 3486: 2841:) I'd rather have some neutral parties knowledgeable of the subjects to weigh in rather than me jumping in unilaterally on this issue. Thanks, and kind regards, 2611: 1763: 1585: 1548: 1125: 4805:. Gallagher is the official name but not really the common name - while some sources use it, I've never heard anyone call the station anything but Lowell - and 4311: 3780:
The link I gave shows many sources do use "Sarum Rite". "Sarum Use" would likely also be an acceptable title, but it didn't receive support in the discussion.--
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I just noticed all the categories for her are categories for actual persons, and I think they should be replaced with fictional character categories and maybe
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doesn't verify that part of the text, and a look at Google Books turned up nothing else that did. If there is such a source, it could certainly be added in.--
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Agreed. There isn't a city or town named "Statue of Margaret Thatcher", so comma disambiguation is inconsistent with the rest of the encyclopedia generally.
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assimilated into later folklore in Britain, as Christian elements were in Irish legend after the monks got involved in recording but altering the stories.
4774:: Sorry, I somehow missed this comment. When I rewrote it I removed the stuff that wasn't supported by the citations given (or that had no citation). The 3030: 2339: 765:
The statue is a structure. I don't recall anyone making the argument that zero such articles presently have parenthetic disambiguation. You're making a
4524: 2992: 2877: 1552: 4818: 4630: 3209: 1488: 800:. It is not a location. It is therefore not the sort of thing to which comma disambiguation typically applies either in Knowledge or in the real world. 4325: 3952: 3259: 3254: 3160: 3141: 3121: 3099: 3076: 2933: 2883: 2443: 2237: 2145: 879:
Baloney. Parenthetical disambiguation makes no pretense whatsoever of ever being used anywhere other than Knowledge as the name or title of a subject.
425: 242: 4840: 4223: 3850: 3197:. In fact, the opposite was stated by one participant. And there wasn’t strong enough support for the suggestion to override the primary topic issue.— 2798: 279: 170: 3792: 3775: 3748: 3723: 3702: 3245:. Because you closed the move discussion for this page, or otherwise were interested in the page, you might want to participate in the move review. 1378: 548: 526: 502: 480: 445: 414: 394: 4314:
to have performed at least one (logged) administrative action in the past 5 years in order to qualify for a resysop without going through a new RfA.
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for comments about the article. Well done! If the article has not already been on the main page as an "In the news" or "Did you know" item, you can
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be integral to gathering information about how this noticeboard works - which problems it deals with well, and which problems it struggles with.
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You mention a source, but you have not included it in the article. You have ignored my requests to add citations to the unsupported material.
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CĂșchullain, have supported now; that you are struggling to find material on my suggestion suggests that it isn't so much covered or germane.
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I'd agree with that. By the way, have you considered registering an account? I can see you're doing quite a bit of work on these articles.--
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Thanks for getting back to me, Bill. I've taken the issue to Move Review as I really think that this one needs looking into. All the best,
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If you would like to take this survey, please sign up on this page, and a link for the survey will be mailed to you via Special:Emailuser.
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Yeah, she should not be included in categories that are exclusively for historical people, but there are some that she should still be in
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thoroughly confident that I was sufficiently informed on the subject. Few editors seem to hold themselves to such standards, sad to say.
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infobox (which I disagree with) to a number of these articles, sometimes removing and replacing other infoboxes in the process. ( see
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Speaking of your source, I did not find reviews on the Welsh Classical Dictionary. But I found a source on the methodology behind it:
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No worries. However, I stand by my close. I don't think that new information is relevant. The only relevant matter is what is the
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I don’t mind, but I’ll explain a bit first. I did take that suggestion into account, but no one made clear arguments that this is
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use comma and not parenthetical disambiguation. I must reiterate that there was never any consensus for comma disambiguation, and
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This process may take up to 7 days. Feel free to contact me with any questions or comments you might have during this period.
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It definitely seems to be the more common version in the sources. I'll move it back and try tweak the intro wording as well.--
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a change to the discretionary sanctions procedures which would require an editor to appeal a sanction to the community at
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usually only has yardline-like bars. The source you added, which was from 1905, doesn't support what you added. In fact,
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regarded Welsh Classical Dictionary), nothing is known about Owain Ddanwyn - he is merely a name in a few old pedigrees.
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looks to be leaning towards favouring option D at the moment as well, which puts the location in parentheses. Thanks  —
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that intends to assist administrators in resolving user conduct disputes. Feedback on the concept may be posted on the
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I have a new content different from what you directed. Please don't mess up my page that I did with much research.
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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. An automated process has detected that you've added some links pointing to
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participants back comma disambiguation, as several editors were on the fence. I am thinking of taking to this
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on Meta Wiki until 10 December 2017. In particular, there is a section of the survey regarding new tools for
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that edit filter managers may use to check if one or more strings are all contained in another given string.
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and to prohibit the use of administrative tools as part of paid editing activity, with certain exceptions.
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is conducting a survey for English Knowledge contributors on their experience and satisfaction level with
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is specifically for Geoffrey-inspired pseudohistory. I don't think there should be a separate article for
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Hi - was wondering if you could moderate a dispute? User: Dimadick will not stop edit warring over the
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starting on November 12 until November 21. Voting will begin on November 27 and last until December 10.
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to edit filter managers that will make it easier to look for multiple strings containing spoofed text.
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is now underway to determine whether the restrictions from ACTRIAL should be implemented permanently.
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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
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to their proper names? I can't seem to move them, possibly a consequence of their previous moves.
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https://www.llgc.org.uk/en/discover/digital-gallery/printed-material/a-welsh-classical-dictionary/
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is available to edit filter managers which can be used to store matches from regular expressions.
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As a practical matter, virtually all disambiguators other than locations are parentheticals.
831: 778: 738: 701: 656: 590: 451: 421: 308: 229: 184: 2786:: Done. The edit history was blocking the move. Let me know if you see any more like this.-- 4884: 4832: 4782: 4729: 4663: 4644: 4611: 4569: 4539: 4271: 4185: 3891: 3836: 3784: 3740: 3729: 3694: 3610: 3567: 3493: 3361: 3307: 3246: 3216: 3201: 3179: 3113: 3068: 2951: 2944: 2896: 2889: 2869: 2790: 2721: 2686: 2617: 2397: 2326: 2086: 2023: 1978: 1933: 1893: 1785: 1730:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 1370: 1288: 1270: 1236: 926: 766: 679: 612: 540: 533: 509: 494: 437: 401: 386: 331: 271: 162: 47: 17: 877:
the argument "show it to me in RS" applies just as much to your preference for parenthetic
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if you really want, but you'd need to show that the close failed according to Knowledge
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as well? It seems sensible to close the two at the same time, as an editor is already
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When I looked at Portal, there were still dozens if not hundreds of incoming links to
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It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
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It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
1706: 1363: 1336: 957: 884: 631: 517: 471: 405: 379: 364: 4857:, please make sure that inward links are fixed up. I've just spent 40 minutes doing 723:
a pattern of "very-specific-location-or-structure + comma + less-specific placename"
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or when the payment is made by the Wikimedia Foundation or an affiliate of the WMF.
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which would specify conditions under which a repeat sockmaster may be considered
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decided to undo it myself. If there's any problems, feel free to drop me a line.
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be reverted? The proper name of the station includes the word "station", and per
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Thank you on behalf of the Support & Safety and Anti-Harassment Tools Teams,
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people didn't know or care about the fine points of British nobiliary etiquette.
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If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
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banned, reducing the need to start a community ban discussion for these users.
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that her admin rights be temporarily removed, pending her return from travel.
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either way, but the direction of the conversation looked clear to me. Best,
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Hi there, I'm pleased to inform you that I've begun reviewing the article
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https://wikimediafoundation.org/2017_AN/Incidents_Survey_Privacy_Statement
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describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
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Eligible editors will be invited to submit candidate statements for the
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they object for spurious reasons inconsistent with our guidelines. --
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can now contact the Wikimedia Foundation's emergency address by using
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articles are entirely permissible; we have tens of thousands of them.
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into some sort of list, at least until they're properly developeed. --
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In other words, he offers no interpretations of the primary sources.
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will serve as the Electoral Commission for the 2017 ArbCom Elections.
1112: 107: 3653: 2833:, seems to have a thing for infoboxes. Per our recent interactions ( 2450:
should be amended to require disclosure of paid editing activity at
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Talk:Vikings (TV documentary series)#Requested move 14 January 2018
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where a renaming is suggested. They need you to set them straight.
2826: 3732:. There was no evidence that other names were more common, though 4851:
Hi, when you repurpose a redirect so that it goes to a dab page,
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it may actually refer to just the train side and not the bus part
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when none of the other solutions lead to an optimal article title
404:, as it seems like the only possible way forward at this point.-- 4492:
An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
4374:, making it easier to set expiries for a specific date and time. 3303:: Thanks for the offer! Not too much of an infobox guy myself.-- 2616:
An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
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If you wish to participate in the 2017 election, please review
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new blocking tools and improvements to existing blocking tools
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Modern Welsh Danwyn (Old Welsh dantguin) means "white-tooth".
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is open until Sunday 23:59, 10 December 2017 (UTC). There are
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The Foundations' Anti-Harassment Tools team has released the
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prior to appealing directly to the Arbitration Committee at
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by the community without the need to start a ban discussion.
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Talk:Vikings (2013 TV series)#Requested move 13 January 2018
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Wikimedians are now invited to vote on the proposals in the
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I'd also propose merging tiny stub articles in the style of
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has been substantially rewritten following the closure of
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Administrators who have been desysopped due to inactivity
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which concluded that administrators are not required to
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made for a more historical legendary figure (similar to
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links. At any rate, thanks for cleaning up the links.--
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for development in early 2018. Feedback can be left on
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The Anti-Harassment Tools team is inviting comments on
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is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
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Over the last few months, several users have reported
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Parentheses are not the "default option" though; both
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parenthetical disambiguation should only be used when
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consensus in favor of a move. Thanks for your reply.
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poor foundation for any genuinely academic article.
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notability guideline for organizations and companies
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is certainly in use in reliable secondary sources.--
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for the game. Feel free to add any or add your own!-
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Talk:Silversmith Hotel#Requested move 30 March 2018
4003:to view private data such as IP addresses from the 626:make the arbitrariness of the convention apparent. 4538:as sufficient evidence of consensus for a move to 4054: 3275:and thought maybe you would be interested in this 1172:The Knowledge community has recently learned that 426:Statue of Margaret Thatcher, Guildhall Art Gallery 3652:Start here for ALL of the surviving Customaries: 2481:will investigate and address the top ten results. 292:case in which an Arthurian character cannot pass 3965:A change to the administrator inactivity policy 3109:if you still think their reasoning was faulty.-- 2839:Talk:Mississippian culture#Mound Builders navbox 2077:Disambiguation link notification for December 14 1636:Wikimedia Foundation Community health initiative 350:Closure of the Statue of Margaret Thatcher moves 2612:Disambiguation link notification for January 11 2201:it should be capitalized in the article title. 1764:Disambiguation link notification for December 7 4801:I think it might be better to move it back to 3601:. Meaning, if I or anyone had just redirected 3085:which tells us not to disambiguate by genre. 1619:, with the most common backlogs showing up on 3041:, so would be good to put them both to bed. 4488:Disambiguation link notification for April 4 4040:, the following users are our new stewards: 3962:for at least 24 hours prior to being closed. 2473:The 2017 Community Wishlist Survey results 3322:Administrators' newsletter – February 2018 1427:Administrators' newsletter – December 2017 1409:Sign up here to receive a link to a survey 1000:Administrators' newsletter – November 2017 2340:Administrators' newsletter – January 2018 4534:Hi Cuchullain, I read the discussion at 3004:Talk:Downtown New Britain (CDOT station) 2446:is in progress to determine whether the 2278:and for your kindness and consideration. 1615:that require administrator attention at 4224:Administrators' newsletter – April 2018 4198:Yes, you are right, majority preferred 3851:Administrators' newsletter – March 2018 3489:which requires administrators to add a 3269:Hey! I saw that you edited the article 3025:Thanks for your well reasoned close at 2713:Should be good to go now, thanks again 460:Category:Statues of heads of government 14: 1180:on December 30, 2016, the same day as 44:Do not edit the contents of this page. 4797:Charles A. Gallagher Transit Terminal 3858:from the past month (February 2018). 2347:from the past month (December 2017). 1640:Administrator’s Noticeboard/Incidents 1434:from the past month (November 2017). 1328:HonrarĂĄs a los tuyos (1959 TV series) 458:pointed out. Most of the articles in 4337:autoconfirmed article creation trial 4141:Hi, while closing the discussion on 3949:autoconfirmed article creation trial 3412:with a consensus that candidates at 3329:from the past month (January 2018). 2835:User:Mangokeylime#Mound Builders box 2699:Terrific. No rush—ping me whenever. 1707:2017 Arbitration Committee elections 1586:2017 Arbitration Committee elections 1126:2017 Arbitration Committee Elections 1007:from the past month (October 2017). 946:Category:Statues in New York (state) 152:Category:British traditional history 25: 4319:now automatically considered banned 4229:News and updates for administrators 3856:News and updates for administrators 3327:News and updates for administrators 2345:News and updates for administrators 1432:News and updates for administrators 1005:News and updates for administrators 23: 4233: 4231:from the past month (March 2018). 3860: 3331: 2349: 2251: 1691:ArbCom 2017 election voter message 1436: 1009: 24: 4904: 3654:http://www.sarumcustomary.org.uk/ 3487:discretionary sanctions procedure 3035:threatening a new move discussion 2280:I look forward to the pleasure of 1991:OK, will leave it your judgment. 1704:Hello, Cuchullain. Voting in the 4683: 4415: 4380: 4353: 4297: 4270: 4252: 4241: 4076: 4023: 3986: 3934: 3890: 3879: 3868: 3468: 3437: 3395: 3360: 3350: 3339: 2959: 2908: 2502: 2460: 2429: 2418: 2407: 2396: 2378: 2368: 2357: 2244:Best wishes for 2018, CĂșchullain 1696: 1598: 1568: 1530: 1502: 1475: 1465: 1455: 1444: 1159: 1111: 1073: 1050: 1028: 1017: 29: 4204:anti-Eastern Orthodox sentiment 4179:anti-Eastern Orthodox sentiment 4147:anti-Eastern Orthodox sentiment 3972:A change to the banning policy 2247: 1741:and submit your choices on the 3261:Category:Wikipedians who like 2147:Category:Wikipedians who like 1545:2017 Community Wishlist Survey 1229:Why you redirected my article? 13: 1: 3845:18:53, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3827:18:49, 13 February 2018 (UTC 3793:20:47, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3776:19:56, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3749:19:18, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3724:19:03, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3703:18:50, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3670:17:56, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3632:04:44, 14 February 2018 (UTC) 3619:16:48, 13 February 2018 (UTC) 3593:23:08, 12 February 2018 (UTC) 3576:22:19, 12 February 2018 (UTC) 3553:21:47, 12 February 2018 (UTC) 3425:responding to threats of harm 3161:15:08, 14 February 2018 (UTC) 2276:you have devoted to Knowledge 2238:01:29, 20 December 2017 (UTC) 2215:00:43, 20 December 2017 (UTC) 2181:06:28, 16 December 2017 (UTC) 2141:18:09, 14 December 2017 (UTC) 1720:Knowledge arbitration process 1422:21:12, 28 November 2017 (UTC) 1379:16:59, 27 November 2017 (UTC) 1358:12:46, 25 November 2017 (UTC) 1305:17:48, 22 November 2017 (UTC) 1279:15:51, 22 November 2017 (UTC) 1253:15:32, 22 November 2017 (UTC) 354:Hi Cuchullain. Regarding the 3535:00:51, 4 February 2018 (UTC) 3316:14:56, 2 February 2018 (UTC) 3295:10:49, 2 February 2018 (UTC) 3255:14:39, 31 January 2018 (UTC) 3225:14:39, 31 January 2018 (UTC) 3210:01:06, 31 January 2018 (UTC) 3188:21:48, 30 January 2018 (UTC) 3142:16:03, 9 February 2018 (UTC) 3122:15:34, 9 February 2018 (UTC) 3100:10:34, 9 February 2018 (UTC) 3077:15:24, 30 January 2018 (UTC) 3056:10:11, 30 January 2018 (UTC) 3016:22:39, 29 January 2018 (UTC) 2993:16:41, 25 January 2018 (UTC) 2934:07:41, 25 January 2018 (UTC) 2878:15:06, 23 January 2018 (UTC) 2857:03:11, 22 January 2018 (UTC) 2799:17:31, 17 January 2018 (UTC) 2778:03:42, 17 January 2018 (UTC) 2744:21:34, 13 January 2018 (UTC) 2730:22:40, 12 January 2018 (UTC) 2709:21:35, 12 January 2018 (UTC) 2695:21:28, 12 January 2018 (UTC) 2674:21:10, 12 January 2018 (UTC) 2649:09:13, 11 January 2018 (UTC) 2517:results of the 2017 election 2268: 2155:Hey! Based on your edits to 2059:02:09, 9 December 2017 (UTC) 2032:23:29, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 2001:22:04, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1987:21:37, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1969:21:28, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1942:20:08, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1921:20:05, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1902:18:58, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1877:17:09, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1854:17:02, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1840:16:46, 8 December 2017 (UTC) 1816:20:11, 7 December 2017 (UTC) 1757:18:42, 3 December 2017 (UTC) 1685:20:57, 2 December 2017 (UTC) 1223:00:50, 2 November 2017 (UTC) 962:11:13, 28 October 2017 (UTC) 935:21:24, 27 October 2017 (UTC) 918:21:19, 27 October 2017 (UTC) 888:21:46, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 865:22:18, 27 October 2017 (UTC) 845:21:18, 27 October 2017 (UTC) 823:isn't limited to locations. 816:01:00, 26 October 2017 (UTC) 792:21:45, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 761:21:40, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 743:FermiĂšre Monument (Montreal) 735:Statue of Liberty (Mytilene) 715:21:45, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 688:21:15, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 670:21:03, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 635:20:56, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 621:20:31, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 604:20:24, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 569:16:48, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 549:15:01, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 527:14:55, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 503:14:45, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 481:14:38, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 464:Category:Statues of monarchs 446:13:29, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 415:03:31, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 395:18:20, 23 October 2017 (UTC) 374:06:54, 23 October 2017 (UTC) 340:19:01, 31 October 2017 (UTC) 322:20:54, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 280:18:39, 16 October 2017 (UTC) 262:18:37, 16 October 2017 (UTC) 243:20:54, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 215:16:12, 16 October 2017 (UTC) 198:20:54, 25 October 2017 (UTC) 171:14:56, 16 October 2017 (UTC) 145:12:23, 16 October 2017 (UTC) 131:11:48, 16 October 2017 (UTC) 7: 4143:Requested move 8 March 2018 3429:Special:EmailUser/Emergency 3277:new user category I created 3029:. Are you able to look at 2972:to appear in Did you know. 2606:02:37, 3 January 2018 (UTC) 2335:20:23, 4 January 2018 (UTC) 2308:03:38, 1 January 2018 (UTC) 1592:running for 8 vacant seats. 1092:"Interaction Timeline" tool 1086:The Wikimedia Foundation's 135:I did it myself already. -- 10: 4909: 4893:14:08, 20 April 2018 (UTC) 4874:20:57, 19 April 2018 (UTC) 4841:18:29, 13 April 2018 (UTC) 4819:18:13, 13 April 2018 (UTC) 4791:21:17, 23 April 2018 (UTC) 4766:06:53, 13 April 2018 (UTC) 4668:21:41, 12 April 2018 (UTC) 4474:MediaWiki message delivery 4393:The Arbitration Committee 4216:15:50, 16 March 2018 (UTC) 4194:15:44, 16 March 2018 (UTC) 4171:15:40, 16 March 2018 (UTC) 4123:MediaWiki message delivery 3958:Community ban discussions 3606:the discussion is going.-- 3527:MediaWiki message delivery 3481:The Arbitration Committee 3237:An editor has asked for a 3146:It's at move review now. 2766:St. Davids (SEPTA station) 2598:MediaWiki message delivery 1749:MediaWiki message delivery 1677:MediaWiki message delivery 1215:MediaWiki message delivery 1088:Anti-Harassment Tools team 941:Category:Statues in London 731:Trump Tower (Philadelphia) 727:Trump Tower (White Plains) 4738:17:43, 9 April 2018 (UTC) 4713:17:35, 9 April 2018 (UTC) 4689: 4682: 4653:17:12, 9 April 2018 (UTC) 4616:15:13, 9 April 2018 (UTC) 4593:18:04, 6 April 2018 (UTC) 4578:17:57, 6 April 2018 (UTC) 4556:17:40, 6 April 2018 (UTC) 4525:09:03, 4 April 2018 (UTC) 4482:01:23, 2 April 2018 (UTC) 4303:Guideline and policy news 4131:03:00, 2 March 2018 (UTC) 3940:Guideline and policy news 3401:Guideline and policy news 3002:You may be interested in 2966:Talk:Constantine (Briton) 2903:-status according to the 2435:Guideline and policy news 2118:added a link pointing to 1508:Guideline and policy news 356:RM you closed last Friday 4330:this request for comment 3460:automatic edit summaries 3039:Vikings (2013 TV series) 2282:many additional years of 1176:(William Allen Peckham) 4701:Guatemala–Mexico border 4699:Thank you for creating 4454:Discuss this newsletter 4103:Discuss this newsletter 3507:Discuss this newsletter 3418:Wikipedian-in-Residence 2762:Fortuna (SEPTA station) 2756:Two SEPTA station names 2578:Discuss this newsletter 2274:for the dedicated years 2193:Could the page move of 1657:Discuss this newsletter 1195:Discuss this newsletter 922:Yes, for place names.-- 4847:Repurposing a redirect 4238: 4200:anti-Eastern Orthodoxy 4151:anti-Eastern Orthodoxy 4038:2018 Steward elections 3865: 3644:Move review: Sarum Use 3336: 2354: 2284:editing alongside you. 2256: 1441: 1385:ANI Experiences survey 1366:, I'll look into it.-- 1324:Elisa (1979 TV series) 1014: 4693:The Original Barnstar 4430:discussion has closed 4366:There will soon be a 4247:Administrator changes 4237: 4159:Knowledge:Move review 3874:Administrator changes 3864: 3345:Administrator changes 3335: 2974:Message delivered by 2915:Message delivered by 2363:Administrator changes 2353: 2255: 1716:Arbitration Committee 1450:Administrator changes 1440: 1023:Administrator changes 1013: 798:statue is a structure 739:Golden Boy (Manitoba) 422:Guildhall Art Gallery 360:less than a month ago 42:of past discussions. 4725:! I appreciate it.-- 4634:the cooking gridiron 4540:Silversmith Building 4513:Opt-out instructions 4441:Interaction Timeline 4010:The edit filter has 2952:Constantine (Briton) 2945:Constantine (Briton) 2897:Constantine (Briton) 2890:Constantine (Briton) 2637:Opt-out instructions 2618:North Quincy station 2448:administrator policy 2293:Happy New Year 2018! 2272:Thank you CĂșchullain 2129:opt-out instructions 2083:disambiguation pages 1804:opt-out instructions 1644:sign up on this page 1416:Patrick Earley (WMF) 1394:can be found here: 950:RfC on rail stations 639:False dichotomy. It 18:User talk:Cuchullain 4676:A barnstar for you! 4506:fix with Dab solver 4345:request for comment 2954:you nominated as a 2630:fix with Dab solver 2490:the discussion page 2479:Community Tech team 2444:request for comment 2322:! Happy New Year!-- 2318:Thank you so much, 2163:series of userboxes 2113:fix with Dab solver 1782:fix with Dab solver 1517:request for comment 1133:request for comment 646:Meals, Ready to Eat 4239: 3960:must now stay open 3866: 3660:liturgical books. 3337: 3243:Magic (paranormal) 3232:Magic (paranormal) 2899:you nominated for 2656:Planet of the Apes 2552:Premeditated Chaos 2413:Bureaucrat changes 2355: 2257: 2095:‱ Join us at the 1794:‱ Join us at the 1784:). Such links are 1732:arbitration policy 1442: 1317:Hello, I see that 1101:A new function is 1015: 4890: 4838: 4788: 4735: 4718: 4717: 4650: 4601:Gridiron Football 4591: 4575: 4554: 4530:Silversmith Hotel 4484: 4191: 4133: 3974:has been proposed 3967:has been proposed 3842: 3790: 3746: 3700: 3616: 3573: 3537: 3313: 3207: 3119: 3074: 2982: 2923: 2875: 2831:User:Mangokeylime 2796: 2727: 2692: 2608: 2332: 2316: 2315: 2306: 2262:Charles R. Knight 2100: 2087:usually incorrect 2085:. Such links are 2029: 1984: 1939: 1925:Don't be a dick, 1899: 1799: 1786:usually incorrect 1687: 1376: 1356: 1307: 1291:comment added by 1276: 1255: 1239:comment added by 1225: 932: 685: 618: 546: 500: 443: 392: 337: 277: 168: 103: 102: 54: 53: 48:current talk page 4900: 4888: 4865: 4856: 4836: 4786: 4733: 4721:Well, thank you 4687: 4680: 4679: 4648: 4587: 4573: 4550: 4502:check to confirm 4471: 4419: 4384: 4357: 4312:are now required 4301: 4274: 4256: 4245: 4189: 4120: 4080: 4069: 4063: 4057: 4051: 4045: 4027: 4016: 3990: 3938: 3930: 3894: 3883: 3872: 3840: 3825: 3818: 3788: 3744: 3698: 3614: 3571: 3524: 3485:a change to the 3472: 3441: 3399: 3364: 3354: 3343: 3311: 3293: 3290: 3283: 3230:Move review for 3205: 3157: 3152: 3138: 3133: 3117: 3096: 3091: 3072: 3052: 3047: 2998:Station renaming 2973: 2963: 2914: 2912: 2873: 2863:Heironymous Rowe 2853: 2846: 2815:revision history 2794: 2725: 2690: 2626:check to confirm 2595: 2566: 2564:Worm That Turned 2560: 2554: 2548: 2546:Opabinia regalis 2542: 2536: 2530: 2524: 2506: 2475:have been posted 2464: 2433: 2424:Worm That Turned 2422: 2411: 2400: 2392:Worm That Turned 2382: 2372: 2361: 2330: 2304:(talk)(contribs) 2302: 2294: 2265: 2248: 2234: 2229: 2211: 2206: 2179: 2176: 2169: 2109:check to confirm 2090: 2027: 1982: 1937: 1897: 1789: 1778:check to confirm 1700: 1674: 1602: 1572: 1534: 1506: 1479: 1469: 1459: 1448: 1374: 1354: 1348: 1346: 1344: 1339: 1332:for example here 1286: 1274: 1234: 1212: 1163: 1152: 1146: 1140: 1115: 1077: 1054: 1032: 1021: 930: 916: 857: 843: 808: 790: 753: 713: 683: 668: 616: 602: 561: 544: 498: 441: 390: 335: 320: 290: 275: 241: 196: 166: 81: 56: 55: 33: 32: 26: 4908: 4907: 4903: 4902: 4901: 4899: 4898: 4897: 4863: 4852: 4849: 4799: 4746: 4678: 4603: 4532: 4490: 4485: 4469: 4468: 4368:calendar widget 4284:Sebastiankessel 4226: 4139: 4134: 4118: 4117: 4065: 4059: 4053: 4047: 4041: 4014: 4005:edit filter log 3924: 3853: 3821: 3814: 3809: 3646: 3603:Portal (series) 3599:Portal (series) 3561:Portal (series) 3543: 3538: 3522: 3521: 3324: 3288: 3285: 3281: 3267: 3247:Midnightblueowl 3235: 3217:Midnightblueowl 3195:WP:PRIMARYTOPIC 3180:Midnightblueowl 3175: 3155: 3150: 3136: 3131: 3094: 3089: 3050: 3045: 3023: 3000: 2978:, on behalf of 2948: 2919:, on behalf of 2893: 2851: 2844: 2819:Uzita (Florida) 2807: 2760:Could you move 2758: 2661: 2614: 2609: 2593: 2592: 2562: 2558:RickinBaltimore 2556: 2550: 2544: 2538: 2532: 2526: 2520: 2342: 2312: 2311: 2296: 2292: 2266: 2259: 2246: 2232: 2227: 2209: 2204: 2195:Everett Station 2191: 2188:Everett Station 2174: 2171: 2167: 2153: 2097:DPL WikiProject 2079: 1823: 1796:DPL WikiProject 1766: 1761: 1760: 1701: 1693: 1688: 1672: 1671: 1553:anti-harassment 1429: 1387: 1350: 1340: 1337: 1335: 1315: 1231: 1226: 1210: 1209: 1148: 1142: 1136: 1090:is creating an 1038:Megalibrarygirl 1002: 914: 897: 851: 841: 824: 802: 788: 771: 747: 711: 694: 666: 649: 600: 583: 555: 352: 318: 301: 284: 239: 222: 194: 177: 111: 77: 30: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 4906: 4896: 4895: 4848: 4845: 4844: 4843: 4803:Lowell station 4798: 4795: 4794: 4793: 4754: 4748:Your edits to 4745: 4742: 4741: 4740: 4716: 4715: 4696: 4695: 4690: 4688: 4677: 4674: 4673: 4672: 4671: 4670: 4602: 4599: 4598: 4597: 4596: 4595: 4531: 4528: 4489: 4486: 4470: 4467: 4466: 4461: 4456: 4450: 4449: 4448: 4447: 4446: 4445: 4444: 4437: 4413: 4412: 4411: 4410: 4395:is considering 4378: 4377: 4376: 4375: 4359:Technical news 4351: 4350: 4349: 4348: 4341:been published 4335:The six-month 4333: 4322: 4315: 4295: 4294: 4268: 4262:Cordless Larry 4225: 4222: 4221: 4220: 4219: 4218: 4138: 4135: 4119: 4116: 4115: 4110: 4105: 4099: 4098: 4097: 4096: 4095: 4094: 4093: 4074: 4073: 4072: 4071: 4036:Following the 4021: 4020: 4019: 4018: 4008: 3992:Technical news 3984: 3983: 3982: 3981: 3970: 3963: 3956: 3932: 3931: 3922: 3896:AngelOfSadness 3888: 3852: 3849: 3848: 3847: 3808: 3805: 3804: 3803: 3802: 3801: 3800: 3799: 3798: 3797: 3796: 3795: 3756: 3755: 3754: 3753: 3752: 3751: 3706: 3705: 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Index

User talk:Cuchullain
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current talk page
Archive 30
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Archive 39
Guinevere
Gwenhwyfar
Gwenhwyfach
94.246.150.68
talk
11:48, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
94.246.150.68
talk
12:23, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
Category:British traditional history
Gwenhwyfar
CĂșchullain

c
14:56, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
SMcCandlish
☏
Âą
20:54, 25 October 2017 (UTC)
94.246.150.68

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