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Han(n)s Hörbiger

Spelled "Hans" in the Gardner book... AnonMoos (talk) 17:09, 19 February 2015 (UTC)

Hm. Spelled "Hanns" in the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek and other literature given on de:Hanns Hörbiger. As "Hans" is the usual spelling of this name, maybe Gardner has a typo? --ἀνυπόδητος (talk) 16:08, 22 February 2015 (UTC)

Hinweis

Schau doch bitte mal da vorbei.--Mabschaaf (talk) 10:47, 1 March 2015 (UTC)

Language-population update project

Hi. The 18th edition of Ethnologue just came out, and if we divide up our language articles among us, it won't take long to update them. I would appreciate it if you could help out, even if it's just a few articles (5,000 articles is a lot for just me), but I won't be insulted if you delete this request.

A largely complete list of articles to be updated is at Category:Language articles citing Ethnologue 17. The priority articles are in Category:Language articles with old Ethnologue 17 speaker data. These are the 10% that have population figures at least 25 years old.

Probably 90% of the time, Ethnologue has not changed their figures between the 17th and 18th editions, so all we need to do is change "e17" to "e18" in the reference (ref) field of the language info box. That will change the citation for the artcle to the current edition. Please put the data in the proper fields, or the info box will flag it as needing editorial review. The other relevant fields are "speakers" (the number of native speakers in all countries), "date" (the date of the reference or census that Ethnologue uses, not the date of Ethnologue!), and sometimes "speakers2". Our convention has been to enter e.g. "1990 census" when a census is used, as other data can be much older than the publication date. Sometimes a citation elsewhere in the article depends on the e17 entry, in which case you will need to change "name=e17" to "name=e18" in the reference tag (assuming the 18th edition still supports the cited claim).

Remember, we want the *total* number of native speakers, which is often not the first figure given by Ethnologue. Sometimes the data is too incompatible to add together (e.g. a figure from the 1950s for one country, and a figure from 2006 for another), in which case it should be presented that way. That's one use for the "speakers2" field. If you're not sure, just ask, or skip that article.

Data should not be displayed with more than two, or at most three, significant figures. Sometimes it should be rounded off to just one significant figure, e.g. when some of the component data used by Ethnologue has been approximated with one figure (200,000, 3 million, etc.) and the other data has greater precision. For example, a figure of 200,000 for one country and 4,230 for another is really just 200,000 in total, as the 4,230 is within the margin of rounding off in the 200,000. If you want to retain the spurious precision of the number in Ethnologue, you might want to use the {{sigfig}} template. (First parameter in this template is for the data, second is for the number of figures to round it off to.)

Dates will often need to be a range of all the country data in the Ethnologue article. When entering the date range, I often ignore dates from countries that have only a few percent of the population, as often 10% or so of the population isn't even separately listed by Ethnologue and so is undated anyway.

If Ethnologue does not provide a date for the bulk of the population, just enter "no date" in the date field. But if the population figure is undated, and hasn't changed between the 17th & 18th editions of Ethnologue, please leave the ref field set to "e17", and maybe add a comment to keep it so that other editors don't change it. In cases like this, the edition of Ethnologue that the data first appeared in may be our only indication of how old it is. We still cite the 14th edition in a couple dozen articles, so our readers can see that the data is getting old.

The articles in the categories linked above are over 90% of the job. There are probably also articles that do not currently cite Ethnologue, but which we might want to update with the 18th edition. I'll need to generate another category to capture those, probably after most of the Ethnologue 17 citations are taken care of.

Jump in at the WP:LANG talk page if you have any comments or concerns. Thanks for any help you can give!

kwami (talk) 02:46, 4 March 2015 (UTC)

Farydak

FYI... you just created a redirect to itself. Bgwhite (talk) 05:10, 26 March 2015 (UTC)

Good grief. Thanks for telling me. Fixed now. --ἀνυπόδητος (talk) 18:19, 26 March 2015 (UTC)

Nomination for deletion of Template:Digestives

 Template:Digestives has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Tom (LT) (talk) 08:09, 27 March 2015 (UTC)

Disambiguation link notification for March 29

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DYK for Bromelain (pharmacology)

 — Crisco 1492 (talk) 00:02, 4 April 2015 (UTC)

Your common.css page

Hi; I notice that in User:Anypodetos/common.css you have the CSS rule

.ambox-Orphan{display: inherit !important}

- please note that there is an error in this (almost certainly copied from an old version of Template:Orphan#Visibility) which causes incorrect display in some browsers.

To check this, visit this page and look at the second bullet (the one that precedes the text "This article is an orphan ..."). If this bullet is not in the same alignment as the other four, but displaced to the left, you can fix it by altering inherit to table in the CSS rule mentioned earlier. If that doesn't work either, alter it to block.

Template:Orphan#Visibility has been amended. --Redrose64 (talk) 19:24, 1 May 2015 (UTC)

Thanks, table works. --ἀνυπόδητος (talk) 19:33, 1 May 2015 (UTC)

Proposed deletion of Azoximer bromide

 

The article Azoximer bromide has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:

possibly not notable russian substance

While all constructive contributions to Wikipedia are appreciated, content or articles may be deleted for any of several reasons.

You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the {{proposed deletion/dated}} notice, but please explain why in your edit summary or on the article's talk page.

Please consider improving the article to address the issues raised. Removing {{proposed deletion/dated}} will stop the proposed deletion process, but other deletion processes exist. In particular, the speedy deletion process can result in deletion without discussion, and articles for deletion allows discussion to reach consensus for deletion. (you edited the article in 2014) a5b (talk) 23:41, 26 July 2015 (UTC)

SAPhon project?

Hi,

Would you be interested in a new project? Prof. Lev Michael at UC Berkely has created the "South American Phonological Inventory Database". This consists of phonemic inventories (and their sources) for 300+ South American languages. It would be nice if we could link to the individual SAPhon articles from an external link section of our articles. I wrote to ask him, and he said he though it would be a great idea. See Abipon language for one I did manually.

It would be easy to do the rest by bot. Lev has a list of supported languages here. In the html source of that page, it has lines like this:

<td><a href="inv/Achuar.html">Achuar-Shiwiar</a></td><td>acu</td><td>Jivaroan</td><td>Peru, Ecuador</td><td><a href="./?c=acu">Map</a></td></tr><tr>

I created the {{SAPhon}} template to handle links. The name in the href string is placed in the first (address) slot, and the spanned name in the second (display name) slot. In this case, that would produce:

*{{SAPhon|Achuar|Achuar-Shiwiar}}

which would display as:

  • Lev, Michael; Stark, Tammy; Chang, Will (2012). "Phonological inventory of Achuar-Shiwiar". The South American Phonological Inventory Database (version 1.1.3 ed.). Berkeley: University of California: Survey of California and Other Indian Languages Digital Resource.

In the tab after the spanned name in the html code above is the ISO code ('acu'). PotatoBot should be able to follow our redirect at ISO 639:acu to Shiwiar language, and add *{{SAPhon|Achuar|Achuar-Shiwiar}} to the external links section (creating an external links section if need be).

Occasionally there is more than one phonemic inventory for what we consider to be a single language, in which case there could be two or three SAPhon links in the WP article.

As for where we'd want to place the link relative to others in the External Links section, I'd suggest at the top, right after the {{WALS}} entry if there is one (as there is at Shiwiar).

Anyway, is this something you'd have time for and be interested in? — kwami (talk) 18:39, 30 July 2015 (UTC)

PS. If you really want to get fancy, the bot could copy the SAPhon inventory over to the WP page and ref SAPhon. There are online html>wiki converters, so I'll try Shiwiar.

Hey, that turned out well with a minimal amount of cleanup - changing to wikitable IPA class, making the biblio entry a ref and crediting SAPhon, centering the columns, changing header class to exclamation marks, changing colons to IPA length signs. Pretty straightforward. — kwami (talk) 18:58, 30 July 2015 (UTC)

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DYK for Vosoritide

Gatoclass (talk) 19:09, 28 September 2015 (UTC)

Precious again

linguistics and pharmacology
Thank you for quality articles on linguistics Nomina im Indogermanischen Lexikon and Proto-Indo-European root, and on pharmacology, such as Nomenclature of monoclonal antibodies, for updates, assessments and redirects, for templates like {{M. C. Escher}}, - you are an awesome Wikipedian!

--Gerda Arendt (talk) 08:26, 31 October 2014 (UTC)

A year ago, you were the 1019th recipient of my PumpkinSky Prize, --Gerda Arendt (talk) 19:30, 1 November 2015 (UTC)

ArbCom elections are now open!

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