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L3 | This user is a loyal follower of Lupin III. |
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This user owns 4 working computers.
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| This user built their own PC. |
| This user still remembers these. |
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This user likes icons like this.
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| This user is against DRM. |
English | This user knows that 'to' is pronounced /tʊ/, not /a/. |
who(m) | This user uses either who or whom in the object case. |
you one | This user knows that one should not use "you" in encyclopedia articles or other formal works. |
than then | This user understands the difference between using "than" and "then." |
Latin Plurals: "Data is are..."
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This user uses "data", "media", "memoranda", "criteria", and "agenda" as the plurals of "datum", "medium", "memorandum", "criterion", and "agendum".
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Majority ≠ right
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This user recognizes that even if 300,000,000 people make the same mistake, it's still a mistake.
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Majority ≠ right
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This user recognizes that even if 300,000,000 people make the same mistake, it's still a mistake.
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. The | This user does not put two spaces after a full stop. |
; | This user is addicted to semicolons; they use them frequently. |
ANAL 4 | This user advocates good grammar usage. |
Mix | This user has been influenced by too many dialects of English to use one orthography, vocabulary and grammar consistently. |
AIM-Able | This user understands AIM talk perfectly well, but does not seriously use it. Ever. |
Gundam Pilot | This user could've been a Gundam Pilot if they knew what courses to take. |
FLCL | This user's head is an N.O. channel. |
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Name: James Townsend
BRECKSCAVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV!!!!!!!!!!
James' Big List o' Copyediting and Style Guidelines/Good Things to Know
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Most of these should come as no surprise to a good number of people, but I am just trying to keep a running list of them for reference. Let's begin, shall we?
- Wont and won't are two separate words entirely. One may be wont to avoid mistakes in article writing but that won't make them infallible!
- Copious use of colons, semicolons, and em dashes does not necessarily make you a more intelligent person, but using them improperly almost always makes you look silly.
- If it already existed prior to a person seeing or experiencing it, it was discovered, described, identified, or something along those lines. If it didn't exist in any way shape or form prior to a person experiencing it, etc., it was probably either created or invented. ex. Thomas Edison invented the light bulb. Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto.
- Seriously...It's okay to write "between five and seven million soldiers died in the war," but if you ask me (and a lot of folks, I'd reckon) things like "between 5 and 7,000,000 soldiers died in the war" should be avoided--on Wikipedia at least. Why? Because its ambiguous: do you mean between five soldiers and seven million soldiers, or what? This should be clear from the context in this example, because it's a large number, but the confusion grows as the gap between the values shrinks. And really, there are so many perfectly wonderful ways to avoid this situation (by rearranging terms, parenthetical statements--quoting might even work) that it is fairly ridiculous to let something like this ride on. So. There ya go.
I am an awful and vindictive person when it comes to grammar and punctuation. One day it will come back and bite me in the ass. I know.
LOL!?