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possible (borderline) addition: The_Nine_Lives_of_Chloe_King Halconen ( talk) 20:48, 18 February 2013 (UTC)
also a couple of Creatures_of_Grimm including Mauvais Dentes and Klaustreich. Halconen ( talk) 20:54, 18 February 2013 (UTC)
Possible addition for popular culture? In Michael Jackson's music video "Thriller," he turns into a werecat:
Thriller_(song)
72.239.133.237 (
talk)
19:54, 13 October 2016 (UTC)
Proposing to spin off a weretiger article from the existing werecat article and to be linked from the pre-existing article having submitted Draft:weretiger Jackie Daytona ( talk) 05:37, 21 February 2022 (UTC) Jackie Daytona ( talk) 11:05, 21 February 2022 (UTC)
(summary: the first parts of the Etymology section of this page now have sources whereas only the final paragraph once did.)
The Etymology section before I edited it (I'll refer to it as "the original") had no citations in the first parts. Only the final paragraph of that section had citations: https://web.archive.org/web/20220524174224//info/en/?search=Werecat
I first edited "phobia" to "philia" because it was more positive, and I did it without an account (i didn't cite anything because the original didn't cite anything so I didn't think I needed to either). That was all. @LizardJr8 messaged me that my edits were "not constructive", but they didn't elaborate. that confused and annoyed me because they gave no details, and the original was arguably less constructive than my edits since bringing up "phobia" has nothing to do with talking about werecats. as i said, there were no sources or links in the original anyways.
My changes were not to take away or mess with citations or sources. I didn't greatly impact the content of the page. I was changing "phobia", which is negative as it's about fear and hate, to something positive. I replied to @LizardJr8 in three separate replies but they didn't reply to me. (i replied three separate times because I wasn't using an account, I didn't know if I could or how to edit original replies with or without an account, and I only just made my wikipedia account now after all of this.)
I don't know how @LizardJr8 could have missed this, but my point was that the original has no connection to the article. Neither does bringing up "philia" but at least it doesn't translate to "fear/hate". Somehow to @LizardJr8, my edits weren't right in some way even though my edits were no different to the original nor had no effect on the page aside from referring to "love" instead of "fear/hate". I know that my edits also had no citations, but again, my point is that the original had no citations either so why not just leave my edits alone? I still don't understand.
I did message @LizardJr8 in one of my replies that it wasn't up to me to provide citations where there weren't any originally anyways. it was @LizardJr8 job to do that; they have a wikipedia account and they know how to cite things, they work on wikipedia pages, while I don't, which I also told them. Just because, I guess what was my alerting them to this part of this page not having citations, it didn't make it my job to fix it.
after i replied the third and final time without an account, i made the same unsourced edits a second time and still without an account because I still didn't understand. instead of replying to me, they changed my second edit back to the original. So I made a wikipedia account, edited "phobia" to "philia" a third time but with my new account, provided citations for not only my edits but also the beginning parts of that Etymology section, and now I'm putting this on the Talk page and here to explain my reasons. I still don't understand what was so wrong with leaving my edits alone or explaining to me what their problem was with my first and second edits.
The next day, I've now made it more clear that ailouros and anthropos are actually root words. Not everyone will know that just because the introduction to the paragraph is "Ailuranthropy comes from the Greek words ailouros meaning "cat", and anthropos, meaning "human"". Now it is obvious, and that's why I referenced ailouros later in the same paragraph. Simple2understand ( talk) 09:53, 28 June 2022 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
This page has archives. Sections older than 28 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 3 sections are present. |
possible (borderline) addition: The_Nine_Lives_of_Chloe_King Halconen ( talk) 20:48, 18 February 2013 (UTC)
also a couple of Creatures_of_Grimm including Mauvais Dentes and Klaustreich. Halconen ( talk) 20:54, 18 February 2013 (UTC)
Possible addition for popular culture? In Michael Jackson's music video "Thriller," he turns into a werecat:
Thriller_(song)
72.239.133.237 (
talk)
19:54, 13 October 2016 (UTC)
Proposing to spin off a weretiger article from the existing werecat article and to be linked from the pre-existing article having submitted Draft:weretiger Jackie Daytona ( talk) 05:37, 21 February 2022 (UTC) Jackie Daytona ( talk) 11:05, 21 February 2022 (UTC)
(summary: the first parts of the Etymology section of this page now have sources whereas only the final paragraph once did.)
The Etymology section before I edited it (I'll refer to it as "the original") had no citations in the first parts. Only the final paragraph of that section had citations: https://web.archive.org/web/20220524174224//info/en/?search=Werecat
I first edited "phobia" to "philia" because it was more positive, and I did it without an account (i didn't cite anything because the original didn't cite anything so I didn't think I needed to either). That was all. @LizardJr8 messaged me that my edits were "not constructive", but they didn't elaborate. that confused and annoyed me because they gave no details, and the original was arguably less constructive than my edits since bringing up "phobia" has nothing to do with talking about werecats. as i said, there were no sources or links in the original anyways.
My changes were not to take away or mess with citations or sources. I didn't greatly impact the content of the page. I was changing "phobia", which is negative as it's about fear and hate, to something positive. I replied to @LizardJr8 in three separate replies but they didn't reply to me. (i replied three separate times because I wasn't using an account, I didn't know if I could or how to edit original replies with or without an account, and I only just made my wikipedia account now after all of this.)
I don't know how @LizardJr8 could have missed this, but my point was that the original has no connection to the article. Neither does bringing up "philia" but at least it doesn't translate to "fear/hate". Somehow to @LizardJr8, my edits weren't right in some way even though my edits were no different to the original nor had no effect on the page aside from referring to "love" instead of "fear/hate". I know that my edits also had no citations, but again, my point is that the original had no citations either so why not just leave my edits alone? I still don't understand.
I did message @LizardJr8 in one of my replies that it wasn't up to me to provide citations where there weren't any originally anyways. it was @LizardJr8 job to do that; they have a wikipedia account and they know how to cite things, they work on wikipedia pages, while I don't, which I also told them. Just because, I guess what was my alerting them to this part of this page not having citations, it didn't make it my job to fix it.
after i replied the third and final time without an account, i made the same unsourced edits a second time and still without an account because I still didn't understand. instead of replying to me, they changed my second edit back to the original. So I made a wikipedia account, edited "phobia" to "philia" a third time but with my new account, provided citations for not only my edits but also the beginning parts of that Etymology section, and now I'm putting this on the Talk page and here to explain my reasons. I still don't understand what was so wrong with leaving my edits alone or explaining to me what their problem was with my first and second edits.
The next day, I've now made it more clear that ailouros and anthropos are actually root words. Not everyone will know that just because the introduction to the paragraph is "Ailuranthropy comes from the Greek words ailouros meaning "cat", and anthropos, meaning "human"". Now it is obvious, and that's why I referenced ailouros later in the same paragraph. Simple2understand ( talk) 09:53, 28 June 2022 (UTC)