MOS:OVERLINK discourages linking countries. I usually only link countries once in the infobox (as I did with the Netherlands).
Sportsfan77777 (
talk) 16:22, 8 September 2021 (UTC)reply
"After she was more intrigued by the chess pieces that they weren't using" → "After she was more intrigued by the chess pieces not being used"
Change note [a] so that it reads "with a score of 7 points in 11 games (7/11), and the note just explains that a win is one point, a draw is 1/2, and a loss is 0
On that note, please add a citation to the note explaining how scoring works; it seems common sense, but if it must be explained in the article, then it should be cited.
"Guramishvili had a strong finish to the year at the World Youth Chess Championships," → "Guramishvili finished the year with a redeeming performance at the World Youth Chess Championships,"
"Guramishvili consolidated her 2006 World Championship gold medal with another excellent year in 2007" → "Guramishvili followed up her gold medal-winning year with another impressive run of tournaments in 2007"
Changed to "an excellent year" if that was what you were getting at?
Duplicate "Georgian" in the first sentence of the second paragraph
I tried using the tool, but couldn't get it to work. You are welcome to do it if it works for you.
Sportsfan77777 (
talk) 16:48, 8 September 2021 (UTC)reply
General comments
All three pictures are Creative Commons licensed and are relevant to the article
MOS:OVERLINK discourages linking countries. I usually only link countries once in the infobox (as I did with the Netherlands).
Sportsfan77777 (
talk) 16:22, 8 September 2021 (UTC)reply
"After she was more intrigued by the chess pieces that they weren't using" → "After she was more intrigued by the chess pieces not being used"
Change note [a] so that it reads "with a score of 7 points in 11 games (7/11), and the note just explains that a win is one point, a draw is 1/2, and a loss is 0
On that note, please add a citation to the note explaining how scoring works; it seems common sense, but if it must be explained in the article, then it should be cited.
"Guramishvili had a strong finish to the year at the World Youth Chess Championships," → "Guramishvili finished the year with a redeeming performance at the World Youth Chess Championships,"
"Guramishvili consolidated her 2006 World Championship gold medal with another excellent year in 2007" → "Guramishvili followed up her gold medal-winning year with another impressive run of tournaments in 2007"
Changed to "an excellent year" if that was what you were getting at?
Duplicate "Georgian" in the first sentence of the second paragraph
I tried using the tool, but couldn't get it to work. You are welcome to do it if it works for you.
Sportsfan77777 (
talk) 16:48, 8 September 2021 (UTC)reply
General comments
All three pictures are Creative Commons licensed and are relevant to the article