Category talk:American people by descent

Latest comment: 14 years ago by Ralph Saroyan in topic Emigrants who landed in America after long travel

Naming conventions edit

Rather than debating these case by case, and Cydebot surreptitiously making changes without a CfD (as it did for Jewish-Americans→Jewish Americans), here is a comprehensive American guideline, as proposed at recent CfD, and the Village Pump, and annotated with some recent decisions. This differs from the world consensus, as follows:

  1. Multiple word ethnicities in the now standard form: Fooian people of Barian descent
  2. Regional ethnicity parent categories without hyphen: Bar Fooian people
  3. Single word national ethnicity adjective followed by nationality (noun) without hyphen: Barish Fooians
  4. National ethnicity compound adjectives followed by occupation (noun) must have hyphen, even though the parent category has no hyphen:

Will folks enforce these in the future without exception? Otherwise, the bickering will continue.
--William Allen Simpson (talk) 16:17, 11 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Emigrants who landed in America after long travel edit

The family of the famous physicist Michel Ter-Pogossian fled Armenian Genocide from Turkey to Gemany, then moved to France, then to the United states. As a result, his bio is categorized into a multitude of cross-national category. To save space, I will abbreviate categories "X-ans of Y-an descent" with "c:X<Y" My question is, whether is it correct to classify Michel Ter-Pogossian with

c:Tu<Ar (forCategory:Turkish Armenians),
c:Ge<Tu, c:Ge<Ar,
c:Fr<Tu, c:Fr<Ar, c:Fr<Ge,

and finally,

c:US<Tu, c:US<Ar, c:US<Ge, c:US<Fr (the last one for category:American people of French descent).

This is not a joke, just look into the article.

I know people with even longer wander....

Are there a rule to reasonably restrict this categorization?

Is there a more general page in wikipedia to discuss this issue? Ralph Saroyan (talk) 20:32, 13 May 2010 (UTC)Reply