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Piotrus, you are not a newcomer. You must know that such statements are opinions which must be attributed. How do you know he was "stalling?" Another very reasonable explanation is that he was working hard to obtain "invitation" of the kind what happened in Baltic states. `' Míkka 15:53, 24 October 2007 (UTC)
Frankly, I don't think the person was notable enough. That he was called "ambasador" in some sources is a language misunderstanding: he was "polnomochny predstavitel", not "polnomochny posol", i.e., just a messenger rfom gov't. He even does not have any reference in societ encyclopedias. `' Míkka 16:20, 24 October 2007 (UTC)
The second paragraph, replicated below in its current form, appears to be missing certain elements (a subject noun phrase, probably, and some kind of finite verb) that would allow it to stand alone as a complete sentence:
I would not be able to supply the missing pieces with confidence, but I am certain an additional noun phrase and a finite verb (and depending on the intended meaning, perhaps even an article or other type of determiner before "[p]lenipotentiary") must be added if the sentence is to be complete. Alternatively, the fragment could be combined in some fashion with an existing complete sentence. For example: Tentatively, I take Plenipotentiary in the above usage to indicate either an unofficial but technically accurate title, or perhaps an official but secondary title. If so (or perhaps even if not -- i.e., even if my identification of Plenipotentiary as a title may have fallen short in some way, in which case a preceding article or other determiner will probably be necessary...), the phrase might successfully be adjoined to the sentence which occurs next after it:
Might that work? -- I will leave it to some person who better understands the intent. IfYouDoIfYouDon't ( talk) 18:00, 19 August 2012 (UTC)
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Piotrus, you are not a newcomer. You must know that such statements are opinions which must be attributed. How do you know he was "stalling?" Another very reasonable explanation is that he was working hard to obtain "invitation" of the kind what happened in Baltic states. `' Míkka 15:53, 24 October 2007 (UTC)
Frankly, I don't think the person was notable enough. That he was called "ambasador" in some sources is a language misunderstanding: he was "polnomochny predstavitel", not "polnomochny posol", i.e., just a messenger rfom gov't. He even does not have any reference in societ encyclopedias. `' Míkka 16:20, 24 October 2007 (UTC)
The second paragraph, replicated below in its current form, appears to be missing certain elements (a subject noun phrase, probably, and some kind of finite verb) that would allow it to stand alone as a complete sentence:
I would not be able to supply the missing pieces with confidence, but I am certain an additional noun phrase and a finite verb (and depending on the intended meaning, perhaps even an article or other type of determiner before "[p]lenipotentiary") must be added if the sentence is to be complete. Alternatively, the fragment could be combined in some fashion with an existing complete sentence. For example: Tentatively, I take Plenipotentiary in the above usage to indicate either an unofficial but technically accurate title, or perhaps an official but secondary title. If so (or perhaps even if not -- i.e., even if my identification of Plenipotentiary as a title may have fallen short in some way, in which case a preceding article or other determiner will probably be necessary...), the phrase might successfully be adjoined to the sentence which occurs next after it:
Might that work? -- I will leave it to some person who better understands the intent. IfYouDoIfYouDon't ( talk) 18:00, 19 August 2012 (UTC)