This user or IP address is currently
globally blocked.
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05:38, 20 September 2022: AntiCompositeNumbermeta.wikimedia.org globally blocked
98.81.0.0/16(
talk) with an expiration time of 05:38, 20 February 2025 (
Open proxy/Webhost: Visit the
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21:4921:49, 14 June 2013diffhist+191
Germantown
Named like Germantown, Maryland, are ALWAYS followed by a punctuation mark in text. E.G. , . ! ? Maryland is used as an appositive here.
20:5620:56, 14 June 2013diffhist+33
Wittenberg
→History: subjects like engineerng, history, linguistics, mathematics, psychology, are not capitalized in English, BUT Chinese, Dutch, English, Polish, Yiddish, are! This is not too hard.
20:4520:45, 14 June 2013diffhist+250
Wittenberg
→History: "...was founded and gave a home to many important thinkers" would never be written by a good native writer of English. Write "...was founded and IT gave a home to many important thinkers".
20:3320:33, 14 June 2013diffhist+10
Wittenberg
→History: "There was on the outskirts of Wittenberg..." is VERY awkward English, and a good, native writer of English would never do this. I have corrected it to a legible form.
20:0720:07, 14 June 2013diffhist+1,045
September 1
→Events: Added the establishment of the ''Order of St. Gregory the Great'' and more about the three Battles of Chantilly and Bull Run.
19:2619:26, 14 June 2013diffhist+195
Order of St. Gregory the Great
Foreign phrases incorporated into English text are to be italicized. E.G. ''tete a tete" and ''en masse'' from French, and ''dias irae'' and ''modus vivendi'' from Latin.
19:0819:08, 14 June 2013diffhist+276
Order of St. Gregory the Great
This article did contain a great deal of disagreement between subjects, verbs, and objects (singular or plural). Usually plural subjects and plural verbs require plural objects, and vice-versa, unless we are talking about a team of horses, oxen, yaks, etc
18:5218:52, 14 June 2013diffhist+317
Order of St. Gregory the Great
Several times, the word "It" was used with no clear antecedent whatsoever. The reader was left to guesswork to find out what "it" stood for. EVERY pronoun must have a clearly-defined antecedent that we can finger and you can't just pull one out of the air
This user or IP address is currently
globally blocked.
If the block is marked as locally disabled, this means that it applies on other sites, but a local administrator has decided to disable it on this wiki.
The global block log entry is provided below for reference:
05:38, 20 September 2022: AntiCompositeNumbermeta.wikimedia.org globally blocked
98.81.0.0/16(
talk) with an expiration time of 05:38, 20 February 2025 (
Open proxy/Webhost: Visit the
FAQ if you are affected <!-- Amazon Web Services -->)
21:4921:49, 14 June 2013diffhist+191
Germantown
Named like Germantown, Maryland, are ALWAYS followed by a punctuation mark in text. E.G. , . ! ? Maryland is used as an appositive here.
20:5620:56, 14 June 2013diffhist+33
Wittenberg
→History: subjects like engineerng, history, linguistics, mathematics, psychology, are not capitalized in English, BUT Chinese, Dutch, English, Polish, Yiddish, are! This is not too hard.
20:4520:45, 14 June 2013diffhist+250
Wittenberg
→History: "...was founded and gave a home to many important thinkers" would never be written by a good native writer of English. Write "...was founded and IT gave a home to many important thinkers".
20:3320:33, 14 June 2013diffhist+10
Wittenberg
→History: "There was on the outskirts of Wittenberg..." is VERY awkward English, and a good, native writer of English would never do this. I have corrected it to a legible form.
20:0720:07, 14 June 2013diffhist+1,045
September 1
→Events: Added the establishment of the ''Order of St. Gregory the Great'' and more about the three Battles of Chantilly and Bull Run.
19:2619:26, 14 June 2013diffhist+195
Order of St. Gregory the Great
Foreign phrases incorporated into English text are to be italicized. E.G. ''tete a tete" and ''en masse'' from French, and ''dias irae'' and ''modus vivendi'' from Latin.
19:0819:08, 14 June 2013diffhist+276
Order of St. Gregory the Great
This article did contain a great deal of disagreement between subjects, verbs, and objects (singular or plural). Usually plural subjects and plural verbs require plural objects, and vice-versa, unless we are talking about a team of horses, oxen, yaks, etc
18:5218:52, 14 June 2013diffhist+317
Order of St. Gregory the Great
Several times, the word "It" was used with no clear antecedent whatsoever. The reader was left to guesswork to find out what "it" stood for. EVERY pronoun must have a clearly-defined antecedent that we can finger and you can't just pull one out of the air