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>Very low pending changes backlog: 2 pages according to DatBot as of 23:45, 27 April 2024 (UTC) reply


<small>({{subst:#time:y.m.d}})</small> :: (YY.MM.DD)used in User:Thnidu#Pages significantly copyedited
<small>{{subst:#time:Y-m-d}}</small> :: YYYY.MM.DD
{{subst:#time:Y-m-d}}  :: YYYY.MM.DD
{{subst:#time:y.m.d}}  :: YY.MM.DD
{{subst:User:Thnidu/Template:pingme}}
Please {{ Ping}} me to discuss.
{{subst:User:Thnidu/Template:pingme0}}~~~~
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{{db-self}} or {{db-u1}} :: user's request to delete user's own page
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Must also add {{notelist}} where you want the notes to be listed in the article.

{{Template:IPA-en}}

Wikipeda favicon for desktop

File:Wikipedia W favicon on white background.png, with a solid white background instead of the transparent background of the official version. I use it for the Wikipedia shortcut on my desktop, as it's much easier to see than the standard one on transparent background. Available on Commons for anyone to use.  

Not under any copyright, but note potential trademark limitations.

My involvements

MEMOS TO SELF

  1.  Done Learn about AWB.
  2. Broad Universe Wikipedia Project
  3. Articles with the {{ copy edit}} tag on are different from requests. You did the right thing by removing the tag, and nothing else needs doing. By the way, requests are sections within Wikipedia:WikiProject Guild of Copy Editors/Requests, not subpages of it, so a search like that would never work. You can see all requests (as opposed to tagged articles) by going to Wikipedia:WikiProject Guild of Copy Editors/Requests and doing a text search. Hope this helps. -- Stfg ( talk) 09:55, 1 February 2014 (UTC) ( source) reply
  4. Wikipedia:Tools#Finding the responsible user
    • WikiBlame – searches for given text in versions of article
    • Soxred93's Article Blamer – similar to WikiBlame, identifies revisions that added given text
    • User:AmiDaniel/WhodunitQuery – Windows application that identifies the edit and user who added a specific word or phrase

Archive

I've moved most old sections of my Talk page to User talk:Thnidu/Archive. 130424. 140202. 141128. 150222.

GOCE July 2013 barnstar

The Minor Barnstar
This barnstar is awarded for participation in the WP:GOCE July 2013 copy edit drive. Thank you for taking part! Diannaa ( talk) 23:35, 5 August 2013 (UTC) reply
@ Diannaa: Oo! Oo! My first! I'm so excited! :-D No irony, no sarcasm here: I really am pleased. Thank you. -- Thnidu ( talk) 04:33, 6 August 2013 (UTC) reply

Neat page bookmarks

Earthsea

Thanks for recent work at Earthsea and Ursula K. Le Guin.

FYI, my today revision --as of 22:00 UTC-- of the fantasy series article Earthsea is scrutable if you break the history in two after my first two edits [1] [2]. In particular, section 4 history is inscrutable as a whole, because of spacing changes. While I skimmed some of the sources in refs 7-18, I didn't do much for the article but expand them. More attention to content is needed, perhaps best after improvement of the two film adaptation articles. -- P64 ( talk) 21:48, 13 August 2015 (UTC) reply

@ P64: My word! Thank you! — Thoughts, some less useful than others.
  • Hmm... We don't have a template for "creative franchise", and in any case the multiple switches for sections that do or don't apply in different cases would be mind-boggling.
  • (Definitely less useful) You changed "catalogued" to the American spelling "cataloged", but Earthsea § Radio has the British spelling "dramatisation". I'm not saying to change it back, but how far is local-variety-of-English consistency supposed to go?
Consistency in variety of English should be imposed at the article level. The same goes for the format of dates and the possibly distinct format of retrieved/archived dates. So a section on British adaptation(s) of a work, within an article where American English and date format are generally used, should use American dramatization and, say, premiered May 29. -- P64 ( talk) 17:23, 16 August 2015 (UTC) reply
  • .... No more for now. I probably won't be able to do more on this till late next week. -- Thnidu ( talk) 01:05, 14 August 2015 (UTC) reply

April 2016 GOCE blitz award

The Working Wikipedian's Barnstar
This barnstar is awarded to Thnidu for copy edits totaling over 4,000 words (including bonus and rollover words) during the GOCE April 2016 Copy Editing Blitz. Congratulations, and thank you for your contributions! – Jonesey95 ( talk) 03:06, 25 April 2016 (UTC) reply

A barnstar for you!

The Copyeditor's Barnstar
For fantastic copyediting of Patidar reservation agitation. It will be very helpful in attaining GA status. Regards, Nizil ( talk) 06:03, 16 August 2016 (UTC) reply

Happy International Translation Day

Not a barnstar, but a token of my appreciation nonetheless. Happy International Translation Day (September 30)!

Link to Sandra Boynton's cartoon in Klingon for International Translation Day

Best, Doreva Dorevabelfiore ( talk) 20:28, 2 October 2016 (UTC) reply

"Translationese" template

Thnidu, I re-posted a proposal for a "translationese" template at the Village Pump Proposals section. I mentioned your name and gave the example you had quoted previously. As you may remember I proposed such a template a month ago, but the proposal was archived after a tepid reaction saying that such templates already existed in the form of the templates {{ Cleanup translation}} and {{ Rough translation}}. In my new post I tried to explain why those were not actually filling the need. - Wwallacee ( talk) 09:08, 1 February 2017 (UTC) reply

Thnidu, thanks for your comments on the Village Pump a few weeks ago about Translationese. Unfortunately I had to put down Wikipedia for a few weeks there and I didn't get to push the discussion further. I myself don't know how to create a template, but I think a link to that Village Pump discussion could be helpful (for example in the Talk pages of culprit articles) if you want to keep this issue alive. The link is here. - Wwallacee ( talk) 09:28, 4 April 2017 (UTC) reply

COOKIES

Cookies!

User:Iamiyouareyou has given you some cookies! Reason: For fixing the fucked grammar on the Fuck page! Horray!

A page you started (Filiative nomen) has been reviewed!

Thanks for creating Filiative nomen, Thnidu!

Wikipedia editor Boleyn just reviewed your page, and wrote this note for you:

Thanks for creating this. It has been tagged with refimprove.

To reply, leave a comment on Boleyn's talk page.

Learn more about page curation.

Boleyn ( talk) 14:08, 10 July 2017 (UTC) reply

Steven Brust - Cracks and Shards

I'm not sure if this is an appropriate use of a wikipedia talk page or not, but are you the guy who used to run that site? Is it still hosted anywhere? Is there a better way to get in touch with you than through this page? Phyrkrakr ( talk) 16:56, 18 October 2017 (UTC) reply

Phyrkrakr, yes, no, and yes. 2) It was lost when my ISP was bought by another one. I've been gathering bits of it out of archives and my own files but have never found the spoons, time, and concentration to re-create it. 3) Via gmail with my name as given on my user page, minus the spaces. Thnidu ( talk) 20:02, 18 October 2017 (UTC) reply

June 2018: Archiving talk page items

Information icon Hello. It appears your talk page is becoming quite lengthy and is in need of archiving. According to Wikipedia's user talk page guidelines; "Large talk pages become difficult to read, strain the limits of older browsers, and load slowly over slow internet connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page exceeds 75 KB or has multiple resolved or stale discussions." - this talk page is 122.8 KB. See Help:Archiving a talk page for instructions on how to manually archive your talk page, or to arrange for automatic archiving using a bot. If you have any questions, place a {{ help me}} notice on your talk page, or go to the help desk. Thank you. -- Jax 0677 ( talk) 06:50, 10 June 2018 (UTC) reply

whom

Hi, I noticed you made this edit a few years ago. I feel like I've seen the word whom appear increasingly more in articles over the years (even when not following a preposition, though this is not an example of that), and have been trying to figure out if it's just my growing (not that I ever didn't dislike it) hatred for the word making (due to almost entirely being used to be "correct" and as a status symbol when what is correct is what people actually use, making every sentence that I see it in feel irritatingly formal and snobbish) it bother me more, or if it's been increasingly added to pages as "corrections" to older versions. Anyway, I was wondering if there is any Wikipedia guideline on whether whom should be used, if you think whom has increased its appearance due to changes to older sentences that didn't use it or if it's just me being weird, and what would happen if I started removing instances of whom (especially those not following a preposition, where the use is even more unnatural to modern English speakers), theoretically (would I just be undone?), to make articles sound less snobbish, and if you have any defense of whom that could make me start liking its presence on articles more. Dayshade ( talk) 16:15, 10 June 2018 (UTC) reply

Dayshade Sorry to be so late with this reply. I'm really not sure. I think the Teahouse (abbreviated link: WP:TH) would be the right place to ask, or at least to start asking. (But see below. *)
I'm a linguist, retired, and I have a very good sense of English grammar. I made the edit you refer to because the page said
...spoken as a native language by about 66,000 people, 45,000 of which reside on the Faroe Islands and 21,000 in other areas, mainly Denmark.
But "which" is for things, not people. The relative pronoun for persons is "who", objective case "whom", possessive "whose" (sometimes also used for possessive of things: "a country whose people enjoy...").
What you say about "whom" fading away in general usage as the object of a verb matches my perceptions. I'd venture a guess that that's due in part to the limited number of prepositions, as opposed to the essentially limitless vocabulary of verbs: people continually see and maybe hear "to whom", "for whom" (± "the bell tolls"), "from whom", "with whom", and so on, establishing these short, distinctive sequences as units in their minds, perhaps idioms. (Compare: what word do you expect after "As far __" at the beginning of a sentence? Yup, those three words are part of an idiomatic expression, all right.) But neither you nor I are familiar with all the range of styles and dialects of English.
* It seems that I'm giving you an answer after all. I urge you not to go around changing "whom" to "who" as the object of a verb. Both are correct— one in traditional and formal grammar, one in colloquial use, and Wikipedia has plenty of room for different styles of writing. For that matter, are you sure that direct-object "who" is falling out of use outside the US?
And I believe this official policy, a decision of the Arbitration Committee, has a direct bearing on your question:
Optional styles. When either of two styles are acceptable it is inappropriate for a Wikipedia editor to change from one style to another unless there is some substantial reason for the change. For example, with respect to British spelling as opposed to American spelling it would be acceptable to change from American spelling to British spelling if the article concerned a British subject. Revert warring over optional styles is unacceptable; if the article is colour rather than color, it would be wrong to switch simply to change styles as both are acceptable.
Passed 12 to 0 (with 1 abstention) at 16:05, 14 June 2009 (UTC).
-- Thnidu ( talk) 21:34, 28 July 2018 (UTC) reply

Thanks for the response. In my dialect, the word "whom" is always avoided (unless someone is taught to and wants to use it), so that thing-person distinction has broken down, except somewhat in the subject case. So "of which" in that Faroese example sounds perfectly fine to me, but I can live with it staying if it sounds wrong (without being taught as wrong!) to a lot of folk. Similarly to yours, whose is extended to non-people. whom is sometimes heard after prepositions (but things like "to who" are more common) so I can also accept it as a natural form not caused by snobbery. I've spoken to a few English people and they seem to have a similar experience to me where whom is not used naturally but might be used by some after being taught (which is a concept that disgusts me). I'd not be surprised if it was naturally used from childhood in a few dialects, but this seems to be rare. I am inclined to agree with your suggestion, but many of the instances of whom are from "corrections" to older edits with who. How does the suggestion apply to reverting earlier edits where an instance of who was changed to an unnatural instance of whom? Take a look at this edit: https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Romulan&diff=443014356&oldid=442346289 The form that most speakers would use was changed to the highly unnatural form of "whom they resemble and with whom they share a common ancestry." The idea of someone using without being taught to is honestly laughable to me, particularly because of the avoidance of ending a sentence with a preposition, a very common and natural tendency in English that is avoided in some "formal" writing for no valid reason. I reverted it, but now have been reverted by someone else who called my edit disruptive. Which perhaps isn't wrong, but suggests the original edit was more disruptive. Does the age of the edit to change the natural form to an unnatural one matter? Dayshade ( talk) 14:22, 7 August 2018 (UTC) reply

Have you ever considered coming to WisCon?

I've enjoyed your efforts to polish the Ursula LeGuin article over the years, and some of your other work as well; and suspect you might enjoy yourself a great deal. I'm delighted to say that I met and talked to Ursula at a couple of the three WisCons she attended over the years (once at her own expense[!]). -- Orange Mike | Talk 02:31, 22 February 2019 (UTC) reply

@ Orangemike: Thank you for your praise! I'd love to go to WisCon, but I'm retired and on a very limited income, and hence have cut down hard on my spending. :-(
Would that I had met her too! -- Thnidu ( talk) 17:06, 12 March 2019 (UTC) reply
Any good fan-run SF convention is a marvelous occasion to meet and talk to the members of this strange sub-set of humanity we call science fiction fandom. WisCon, being WisCon, is probably the single best place in the world to meet feminist SF readers, critics, writers, editors and scholars from all over the planet. Japanese scholar who was also the first woman in Japan to do cosplay? Yup. The Tiptree Award, Broad Universe, the Carl Brandon Society? All came out of panel discussions at WisCon. Janitor working on his MLS in Library Science? Old regular, got his degree now, has had books published. Pioneers of GLBT SF publishing? See them regularly. Pagan priestess who works for a union? Long-time attendee. Dominatrices? I can name two or three who are regulars. Xena impersonator? Invited to stop by, had a hoot. Mixed-race feminist prison guard from Alabama? Comes whenever she can. Harvard grad student doing a study of fannish cultural history? Got her business card on my desk as I type this. Hippie preacher-turned-Quaker and union activist? Every year since WisCon II. Hugo winners? Everywhere from the huckster's room to the podium to the hospitality suite. -- Orange Mike | Talk 21:18, 12 March 2019 (UTC) reply

Disambiguation link notification for March 7

An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Gender binary, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Binary.

( Opt-out instructions.) -- DPL bot ( talk) 06:36, 7 March 2021 (UTC) reply


For any human who may happen to read this note, that was deliberate. Here's the context:
Gender binary (also known as gender binarism, binarism, or ambiguously genderism) [...] is the classification of gender into two distinct, opposite forms of masculine and feminine, whether by social system or cultural belief.[A]


[A] In this context the word "binary" often functions as a noun, unlike most other uses of the word, where it is an adjective.
-- Thnidu ( talk) 05:37, 21 March 2021 (UTC) reply

Fun tip

Regarding your arrows pointing right, or up, to the Babel boxes on your user page, depending if you're on mobile or not, you could try this:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

Languages I've worked with in recent years* include Thai, Tagalog, Pashto, Tigrinya, Moroccan Berber, Yoruba, Bengali, Tamil, and Urdu. I also developed and maintained the LDC's Language Resource Wiki.
* But do not speak or write; those are over here ⇒up there ⇑

Try viewing this both on mobile and on desktop view. Cheers! Mathglot ( talk) 05:23, 15 June 2021 (UTC) reply

Thanks. Later today, when I'm more awake. Thnidu ( talk) 10:53, 15 June 2021 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors 2022 Annual Report = Information

Guild of Copy Editors 2022 Annual Report

Our 2022 Annual Report is now ready for review.

Highlights:

  • Overview of Backlog-reduction progress
  • Summary of Drives, Blitzes, and the Requests page
  • Membership news and results of elections
  • Closing words
– Your Guild coordinators: Baffle gab1978, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo
To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Sent by Baffle gab1978 using MediaWiki message delivery ( talk) 00:30, 6 February 2023 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors March 2023 Newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors March 2023 Newsletter


Hello and welcome to the March 2023 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since December and our Annual Report for 2022. Don't forget you can unsubscribe at any time; see below. We extend a warm welcome to all of our new members, including those who have signed up for our current March Backlog Elimination Drive. We wish you all happy copy-editing.

Election results: In our December 2022 coordinator election, Reidgreg and Tenryuu stepped down as coordinators; we thank them for their service. Incumbents Baffle gab1978, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo were returned as coordinators until 1 July. For the second time, no lead coordinator was chosen. Nominations for our mid-year Election of Coordinators open on 1 June (UTC).

Drive: 21 editors signed up for our January Backlog Elimination Drive, 14 of whom claimed at least one copy-edit. Between them, they copy-edited 170 articles totaling 389,737 words. Barnstars awarded are here.

Blitz: Our February Copy Editing Blitz focused on October and November 2022 requests, and the March and April 2022 backlogs. Of the 14 editors who signed up, nine claimed at least one copy-edit; and between them, they copy-edited 39,150 words in 22 articles. Barnstars awarded are here.

Drive: Sign up now for our month-long March Backlog Elimination Drive. Barnstars awarded will be posted here after the drive closes.

Progress report: As of 12:08, 19 March 2023 (UTC), GOCE copyeditors have processed 73 requests since 1 January 2023, all but five of them from 2022, and the backlog stands at 1,872 articles.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators Baffle gab1978, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Septermber GOCE newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors September 2023 Newsletter

Hello and welcome to the September 2023 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since June. Don't forget you can unsubscribe at any time; see below.

David Thomsen: Prolific Wikipedian and Guild member David Thomsen ( Dthomsen8) died in November 2022. He was a regular copy editor who took part in many of our Drives and Blitzes. An obituary was published in the mid-July issue of The Signpost. Tributes can be left on David's talk page.

Election news: In our mid-year Election of Coordinators, Dhtwiki was chosen as lead coordinator, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo continue as assistant coordinators, and Baffle gab1978 stepped down from the role. If you're interested in helping out at the GOCE, please consider nominating yourself for our next election in December; it's your WikiProject and it doesn't organize itself!

June Blitz: Of the 17 editors who signed up for our June Copy Editing Blitz, 12 copy-edited at least one article. 70,035 words comprising 26 articles were copy-edited. Barnstars awarded are here.

July Drive: 34 of the 51 editors who took part in our July Backlog Elimination Drive copy-edited at least one article. They edited 276 articles and 683,633 words between them. Barnstars awarded are here.

August Blitz: In our August Copy Editing Blitz, 13 of the 16 editors who signed up worked on at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 79,608 words comprising 57 articles. Barnstars awarded are available here.

September Drive: Sign up here for our month-long September Backlog Elimination Drive, which is now underway. Barnstars awarded will be posted here.

Progress report: As of 14:29, 9 September 2023 (UTC), GOCE copy editors have processed 245 requests since 1 January. The backlog of tagged articles stands at 2,066.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

MediaWiki message delivery ( talk) 13:55, 10 September 2023 (UTC) reply

Nomination for deletion of Template:Kerala State Film Awards intro

Template:Kerala State Film Awards intro has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the entry on the Templates for discussion page. The Doom Patrol ( talk) 12:15, 28 October 2023 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors December 2023 Newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors December 2023 Newsletter

Hello, and welcome to the December 2023 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since September. Don't forget that you can unsubscribe at any time; see below.

Election news: The Guild needs coordinators! If you'd like to help out, you may nominate yourself or any suitable editor—with their permission—for the Election of Coordinators for the first half of 2024. Nominations will close at 23:59 on 15 December (UTC). Voting begins immediately after the close of nominations and closes at 23:59 on 31 December. All editors in good standing (not under current sanctions) are eligible, and self-nominations are welcome. Coordinators normally serve a six-month term that ends at 23:59 on 30 June.

Drive: Of the 69 editors who signed up for the September Backlog Elimination Drive, 40 copy-edited at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 661,214 words in 290 articles. Barnstars awarded are listed here.

Blitz: Of the 22 editors who signed up for the October Copy Editing Blitz, 13 copy-edited at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 109,327 words in 52 articles. Barnstars awarded are listed here.

Drive: During the November Backlog Elimination Drive, 38 of the 58 editors who signed up copy-edited at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 458,620 words in 234 articles. Barnstars awarded are listed here.

Blitz: Our December Copy Editing Blitz will run from 10 to 16 December. Barnstars awarded will be posted here.

Progress report: As of 20:33, 10 December 2023 (UTC), GOCE copyeditors have processed 344 requests since 1 January, and the backlog stands at 2,191 articles.

Other news: Our Annual Report for 2023 is planned for release in the new year.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Message sent by Baffle gab1978 using MediaWiki message delivery ( talk) 20:54, 10 December 2023 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors 2023 Annual Report

Guild of Copy Editors 2023 Annual Report

Our 2023 Annual Report is now ready for review.

Highlights:

  • Introduction
  • Membership news, obituary and election results
  • Summary of Drives, Blitzes and the Requests page
  • Closing words
– Your Guild coordinators: Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Wracking.
To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Guild of Copy Editors April 2024 Newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors April 2024 Newsletter

Hello and welcome to the April 2024 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since December. Don't forget you can unsubscribe at any time; see below. We extend a warm welcome to all of our new members. We wish you all happy copy-editing.

Election results: In our December 2023 coordinator election, Zippybonzo stepped down as coordinator; we thank them for their service. Incumbents Dhtwiki and Miniapolis were reelected coordinators, and Wracking was newly elected coordinator, to serve through 30 June. Nominations for our mid-year Election of Coordinators will open on 1 June (UTC).

Drive: 46 editors signed up for our January Backlog Elimination Drive, 32 of whom claimed at least one copy-edit. Between them, they copy-edited 289 articles totaling 626,729 words. Barnstars awarded are here.

Blitz: 23 editors signed up for our February Copy Editing Blitz. 18 claimed at least one copy-edit and between them, they copy-edited 100,293 words in 32 articles. Barnstars awarded are here.

Drive: 53 editors signed up for our March Backlog Elimination Drive, 34 of whom claimed at least one copy-edit. Between them, they copy-edited 300 articles totaling 587,828 words. Barnstars awarded are here.

Blitz: Sign up for our April Copy Editing Blitz, which runs from 14 to 20 April. Barnstars will be awarded here.

Progress report: As of 23:17, 11 April 2024 (UTC), GOCE copyeditors have processed 109 requests since 1 January 2024, and the backlog stands at 2,480 articles.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from Baffle gab1978 and your GOCE coordinators Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Wracking.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

     

>Very low pending changes backlog: 2 pages according to DatBot as of 23:45, 27 April 2024 (UTC) reply


<small>({{subst:#time:y.m.d}})</small> :: (YY.MM.DD)used in User:Thnidu#Pages significantly copyedited
<small>{{subst:#time:Y-m-d}}</small> :: YYYY.MM.DD
{{subst:#time:Y-m-d}}  :: YYYY.MM.DD
{{subst:#time:y.m.d}}  :: YY.MM.DD
{{subst:User:Thnidu/Template:pingme}}
Please {{ Ping}} me to discuss.
{{subst:User:Thnidu/Template:pingme0}}~~~~
pingme0 is for use in the Teahouse and any other pages where an entry must end with ~~~~ to be accepted
{{db-self}} or {{db-u1}} :: user's request to delete user's own page
{{efn|text of the note}}  :: Explanatory footnote
Must also add {{notelist}} where you want the notes to be listed in the article.

{{Template:IPA-en}}

Wikipeda favicon for desktop

File:Wikipedia W favicon on white background.png, with a solid white background instead of the transparent background of the official version. I use it for the Wikipedia shortcut on my desktop, as it's much easier to see than the standard one on transparent background. Available on Commons for anyone to use.  

Not under any copyright, but note potential trademark limitations.

My involvements

MEMOS TO SELF

  1.  Done Learn about AWB.
  2. Broad Universe Wikipedia Project
  3. Articles with the {{ copy edit}} tag on are different from requests. You did the right thing by removing the tag, and nothing else needs doing. By the way, requests are sections within Wikipedia:WikiProject Guild of Copy Editors/Requests, not subpages of it, so a search like that would never work. You can see all requests (as opposed to tagged articles) by going to Wikipedia:WikiProject Guild of Copy Editors/Requests and doing a text search. Hope this helps. -- Stfg ( talk) 09:55, 1 February 2014 (UTC) ( source) reply
  4. Wikipedia:Tools#Finding the responsible user
    • WikiBlame – searches for given text in versions of article
    • Soxred93's Article Blamer – similar to WikiBlame, identifies revisions that added given text
    • User:AmiDaniel/WhodunitQuery – Windows application that identifies the edit and user who added a specific word or phrase

Archive

I've moved most old sections of my Talk page to User talk:Thnidu/Archive. 130424. 140202. 141128. 150222.

GOCE July 2013 barnstar

The Minor Barnstar
This barnstar is awarded for participation in the WP:GOCE July 2013 copy edit drive. Thank you for taking part! Diannaa ( talk) 23:35, 5 August 2013 (UTC) reply
@ Diannaa: Oo! Oo! My first! I'm so excited! :-D No irony, no sarcasm here: I really am pleased. Thank you. -- Thnidu ( talk) 04:33, 6 August 2013 (UTC) reply

Neat page bookmarks

Earthsea

Thanks for recent work at Earthsea and Ursula K. Le Guin.

FYI, my today revision --as of 22:00 UTC-- of the fantasy series article Earthsea is scrutable if you break the history in two after my first two edits [1] [2]. In particular, section 4 history is inscrutable as a whole, because of spacing changes. While I skimmed some of the sources in refs 7-18, I didn't do much for the article but expand them. More attention to content is needed, perhaps best after improvement of the two film adaptation articles. -- P64 ( talk) 21:48, 13 August 2015 (UTC) reply

@ P64: My word! Thank you! — Thoughts, some less useful than others.
  • Hmm... We don't have a template for "creative franchise", and in any case the multiple switches for sections that do or don't apply in different cases would be mind-boggling.
  • (Definitely less useful) You changed "catalogued" to the American spelling "cataloged", but Earthsea § Radio has the British spelling "dramatisation". I'm not saying to change it back, but how far is local-variety-of-English consistency supposed to go?
Consistency in variety of English should be imposed at the article level. The same goes for the format of dates and the possibly distinct format of retrieved/archived dates. So a section on British adaptation(s) of a work, within an article where American English and date format are generally used, should use American dramatization and, say, premiered May 29. -- P64 ( talk) 17:23, 16 August 2015 (UTC) reply
  • .... No more for now. I probably won't be able to do more on this till late next week. -- Thnidu ( talk) 01:05, 14 August 2015 (UTC) reply

April 2016 GOCE blitz award

The Working Wikipedian's Barnstar
This barnstar is awarded to Thnidu for copy edits totaling over 4,000 words (including bonus and rollover words) during the GOCE April 2016 Copy Editing Blitz. Congratulations, and thank you for your contributions! – Jonesey95 ( talk) 03:06, 25 April 2016 (UTC) reply

A barnstar for you!

The Copyeditor's Barnstar
For fantastic copyediting of Patidar reservation agitation. It will be very helpful in attaining GA status. Regards, Nizil ( talk) 06:03, 16 August 2016 (UTC) reply

Happy International Translation Day

Not a barnstar, but a token of my appreciation nonetheless. Happy International Translation Day (September 30)!

Link to Sandra Boynton's cartoon in Klingon for International Translation Day

Best, Doreva Dorevabelfiore ( talk) 20:28, 2 October 2016 (UTC) reply

"Translationese" template

Thnidu, I re-posted a proposal for a "translationese" template at the Village Pump Proposals section. I mentioned your name and gave the example you had quoted previously. As you may remember I proposed such a template a month ago, but the proposal was archived after a tepid reaction saying that such templates already existed in the form of the templates {{ Cleanup translation}} and {{ Rough translation}}. In my new post I tried to explain why those were not actually filling the need. - Wwallacee ( talk) 09:08, 1 February 2017 (UTC) reply

Thnidu, thanks for your comments on the Village Pump a few weeks ago about Translationese. Unfortunately I had to put down Wikipedia for a few weeks there and I didn't get to push the discussion further. I myself don't know how to create a template, but I think a link to that Village Pump discussion could be helpful (for example in the Talk pages of culprit articles) if you want to keep this issue alive. The link is here. - Wwallacee ( talk) 09:28, 4 April 2017 (UTC) reply

COOKIES

Cookies!

User:Iamiyouareyou has given you some cookies! Reason: For fixing the fucked grammar on the Fuck page! Horray!

A page you started (Filiative nomen) has been reviewed!

Thanks for creating Filiative nomen, Thnidu!

Wikipedia editor Boleyn just reviewed your page, and wrote this note for you:

Thanks for creating this. It has been tagged with refimprove.

To reply, leave a comment on Boleyn's talk page.

Learn more about page curation.

Boleyn ( talk) 14:08, 10 July 2017 (UTC) reply

Steven Brust - Cracks and Shards

I'm not sure if this is an appropriate use of a wikipedia talk page or not, but are you the guy who used to run that site? Is it still hosted anywhere? Is there a better way to get in touch with you than through this page? Phyrkrakr ( talk) 16:56, 18 October 2017 (UTC) reply

Phyrkrakr, yes, no, and yes. 2) It was lost when my ISP was bought by another one. I've been gathering bits of it out of archives and my own files but have never found the spoons, time, and concentration to re-create it. 3) Via gmail with my name as given on my user page, minus the spaces. Thnidu ( talk) 20:02, 18 October 2017 (UTC) reply

June 2018: Archiving talk page items

Information icon Hello. It appears your talk page is becoming quite lengthy and is in need of archiving. According to Wikipedia's user talk page guidelines; "Large talk pages become difficult to read, strain the limits of older browsers, and load slowly over slow internet connections. As a rule of thumb, archive closed discussions when a talk page exceeds 75 KB or has multiple resolved or stale discussions." - this talk page is 122.8 KB. See Help:Archiving a talk page for instructions on how to manually archive your talk page, or to arrange for automatic archiving using a bot. If you have any questions, place a {{ help me}} notice on your talk page, or go to the help desk. Thank you. -- Jax 0677 ( talk) 06:50, 10 June 2018 (UTC) reply

whom

Hi, I noticed you made this edit a few years ago. I feel like I've seen the word whom appear increasingly more in articles over the years (even when not following a preposition, though this is not an example of that), and have been trying to figure out if it's just my growing (not that I ever didn't dislike it) hatred for the word making (due to almost entirely being used to be "correct" and as a status symbol when what is correct is what people actually use, making every sentence that I see it in feel irritatingly formal and snobbish) it bother me more, or if it's been increasingly added to pages as "corrections" to older versions. Anyway, I was wondering if there is any Wikipedia guideline on whether whom should be used, if you think whom has increased its appearance due to changes to older sentences that didn't use it or if it's just me being weird, and what would happen if I started removing instances of whom (especially those not following a preposition, where the use is even more unnatural to modern English speakers), theoretically (would I just be undone?), to make articles sound less snobbish, and if you have any defense of whom that could make me start liking its presence on articles more. Dayshade ( talk) 16:15, 10 June 2018 (UTC) reply

Dayshade Sorry to be so late with this reply. I'm really not sure. I think the Teahouse (abbreviated link: WP:TH) would be the right place to ask, or at least to start asking. (But see below. *)
I'm a linguist, retired, and I have a very good sense of English grammar. I made the edit you refer to because the page said
...spoken as a native language by about 66,000 people, 45,000 of which reside on the Faroe Islands and 21,000 in other areas, mainly Denmark.
But "which" is for things, not people. The relative pronoun for persons is "who", objective case "whom", possessive "whose" (sometimes also used for possessive of things: "a country whose people enjoy...").
What you say about "whom" fading away in general usage as the object of a verb matches my perceptions. I'd venture a guess that that's due in part to the limited number of prepositions, as opposed to the essentially limitless vocabulary of verbs: people continually see and maybe hear "to whom", "for whom" (± "the bell tolls"), "from whom", "with whom", and so on, establishing these short, distinctive sequences as units in their minds, perhaps idioms. (Compare: what word do you expect after "As far __" at the beginning of a sentence? Yup, those three words are part of an idiomatic expression, all right.) But neither you nor I are familiar with all the range of styles and dialects of English.
* It seems that I'm giving you an answer after all. I urge you not to go around changing "whom" to "who" as the object of a verb. Both are correct— one in traditional and formal grammar, one in colloquial use, and Wikipedia has plenty of room for different styles of writing. For that matter, are you sure that direct-object "who" is falling out of use outside the US?
And I believe this official policy, a decision of the Arbitration Committee, has a direct bearing on your question:
Optional styles. When either of two styles are acceptable it is inappropriate for a Wikipedia editor to change from one style to another unless there is some substantial reason for the change. For example, with respect to British spelling as opposed to American spelling it would be acceptable to change from American spelling to British spelling if the article concerned a British subject. Revert warring over optional styles is unacceptable; if the article is colour rather than color, it would be wrong to switch simply to change styles as both are acceptable.
Passed 12 to 0 (with 1 abstention) at 16:05, 14 June 2009 (UTC).
-- Thnidu ( talk) 21:34, 28 July 2018 (UTC) reply

Thanks for the response. In my dialect, the word "whom" is always avoided (unless someone is taught to and wants to use it), so that thing-person distinction has broken down, except somewhat in the subject case. So "of which" in that Faroese example sounds perfectly fine to me, but I can live with it staying if it sounds wrong (without being taught as wrong!) to a lot of folk. Similarly to yours, whose is extended to non-people. whom is sometimes heard after prepositions (but things like "to who" are more common) so I can also accept it as a natural form not caused by snobbery. I've spoken to a few English people and they seem to have a similar experience to me where whom is not used naturally but might be used by some after being taught (which is a concept that disgusts me). I'd not be surprised if it was naturally used from childhood in a few dialects, but this seems to be rare. I am inclined to agree with your suggestion, but many of the instances of whom are from "corrections" to older edits with who. How does the suggestion apply to reverting earlier edits where an instance of who was changed to an unnatural instance of whom? Take a look at this edit: https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Romulan&diff=443014356&oldid=442346289 The form that most speakers would use was changed to the highly unnatural form of "whom they resemble and with whom they share a common ancestry." The idea of someone using without being taught to is honestly laughable to me, particularly because of the avoidance of ending a sentence with a preposition, a very common and natural tendency in English that is avoided in some "formal" writing for no valid reason. I reverted it, but now have been reverted by someone else who called my edit disruptive. Which perhaps isn't wrong, but suggests the original edit was more disruptive. Does the age of the edit to change the natural form to an unnatural one matter? Dayshade ( talk) 14:22, 7 August 2018 (UTC) reply

Have you ever considered coming to WisCon?

I've enjoyed your efforts to polish the Ursula LeGuin article over the years, and some of your other work as well; and suspect you might enjoy yourself a great deal. I'm delighted to say that I met and talked to Ursula at a couple of the three WisCons she attended over the years (once at her own expense[!]). -- Orange Mike | Talk 02:31, 22 February 2019 (UTC) reply

@ Orangemike: Thank you for your praise! I'd love to go to WisCon, but I'm retired and on a very limited income, and hence have cut down hard on my spending. :-(
Would that I had met her too! -- Thnidu ( talk) 17:06, 12 March 2019 (UTC) reply
Any good fan-run SF convention is a marvelous occasion to meet and talk to the members of this strange sub-set of humanity we call science fiction fandom. WisCon, being WisCon, is probably the single best place in the world to meet feminist SF readers, critics, writers, editors and scholars from all over the planet. Japanese scholar who was also the first woman in Japan to do cosplay? Yup. The Tiptree Award, Broad Universe, the Carl Brandon Society? All came out of panel discussions at WisCon. Janitor working on his MLS in Library Science? Old regular, got his degree now, has had books published. Pioneers of GLBT SF publishing? See them regularly. Pagan priestess who works for a union? Long-time attendee. Dominatrices? I can name two or three who are regulars. Xena impersonator? Invited to stop by, had a hoot. Mixed-race feminist prison guard from Alabama? Comes whenever she can. Harvard grad student doing a study of fannish cultural history? Got her business card on my desk as I type this. Hippie preacher-turned-Quaker and union activist? Every year since WisCon II. Hugo winners? Everywhere from the huckster's room to the podium to the hospitality suite. -- Orange Mike | Talk 21:18, 12 March 2019 (UTC) reply

Disambiguation link notification for March 7

An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Gender binary, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Binary.

( Opt-out instructions.) -- DPL bot ( talk) 06:36, 7 March 2021 (UTC) reply


For any human who may happen to read this note, that was deliberate. Here's the context:
Gender binary (also known as gender binarism, binarism, or ambiguously genderism) [...] is the classification of gender into two distinct, opposite forms of masculine and feminine, whether by social system or cultural belief.[A]


[A] In this context the word "binary" often functions as a noun, unlike most other uses of the word, where it is an adjective.
-- Thnidu ( talk) 05:37, 21 March 2021 (UTC) reply

Fun tip

Regarding your arrows pointing right, or up, to the Babel boxes on your user page, depending if you're on mobile or not, you could try this:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

Languages I've worked with in recent years* include Thai, Tagalog, Pashto, Tigrinya, Moroccan Berber, Yoruba, Bengali, Tamil, and Urdu. I also developed and maintained the LDC's Language Resource Wiki.
* But do not speak or write; those are over here ⇒up there ⇑

Try viewing this both on mobile and on desktop view. Cheers! Mathglot ( talk) 05:23, 15 June 2021 (UTC) reply

Thanks. Later today, when I'm more awake. Thnidu ( talk) 10:53, 15 June 2021 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors 2022 Annual Report = Information

Guild of Copy Editors 2022 Annual Report

Our 2022 Annual Report is now ready for review.

Highlights:

  • Overview of Backlog-reduction progress
  • Summary of Drives, Blitzes, and the Requests page
  • Membership news and results of elections
  • Closing words
– Your Guild coordinators: Baffle gab1978, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo
To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Sent by Baffle gab1978 using MediaWiki message delivery ( talk) 00:30, 6 February 2023 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors March 2023 Newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors March 2023 Newsletter


Hello and welcome to the March 2023 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since December and our Annual Report for 2022. Don't forget you can unsubscribe at any time; see below. We extend a warm welcome to all of our new members, including those who have signed up for our current March Backlog Elimination Drive. We wish you all happy copy-editing.

Election results: In our December 2022 coordinator election, Reidgreg and Tenryuu stepped down as coordinators; we thank them for their service. Incumbents Baffle gab1978, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo were returned as coordinators until 1 July. For the second time, no lead coordinator was chosen. Nominations for our mid-year Election of Coordinators open on 1 June (UTC).

Drive: 21 editors signed up for our January Backlog Elimination Drive, 14 of whom claimed at least one copy-edit. Between them, they copy-edited 170 articles totaling 389,737 words. Barnstars awarded are here.

Blitz: Our February Copy Editing Blitz focused on October and November 2022 requests, and the March and April 2022 backlogs. Of the 14 editors who signed up, nine claimed at least one copy-edit; and between them, they copy-edited 39,150 words in 22 articles. Barnstars awarded are here.

Drive: Sign up now for our month-long March Backlog Elimination Drive. Barnstars awarded will be posted here after the drive closes.

Progress report: As of 12:08, 19 March 2023 (UTC), GOCE copyeditors have processed 73 requests since 1 January 2023, all but five of them from 2022, and the backlog stands at 1,872 articles.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators Baffle gab1978, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Septermber GOCE newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors September 2023 Newsletter

Hello and welcome to the September 2023 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since June. Don't forget you can unsubscribe at any time; see below.

David Thomsen: Prolific Wikipedian and Guild member David Thomsen ( Dthomsen8) died in November 2022. He was a regular copy editor who took part in many of our Drives and Blitzes. An obituary was published in the mid-July issue of The Signpost. Tributes can be left on David's talk page.

Election news: In our mid-year Election of Coordinators, Dhtwiki was chosen as lead coordinator, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo continue as assistant coordinators, and Baffle gab1978 stepped down from the role. If you're interested in helping out at the GOCE, please consider nominating yourself for our next election in December; it's your WikiProject and it doesn't organize itself!

June Blitz: Of the 17 editors who signed up for our June Copy Editing Blitz, 12 copy-edited at least one article. 70,035 words comprising 26 articles were copy-edited. Barnstars awarded are here.

July Drive: 34 of the 51 editors who took part in our July Backlog Elimination Drive copy-edited at least one article. They edited 276 articles and 683,633 words between them. Barnstars awarded are here.

August Blitz: In our August Copy Editing Blitz, 13 of the 16 editors who signed up worked on at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 79,608 words comprising 57 articles. Barnstars awarded are available here.

September Drive: Sign up here for our month-long September Backlog Elimination Drive, which is now underway. Barnstars awarded will be posted here.

Progress report: As of 14:29, 9 September 2023 (UTC), GOCE copy editors have processed 245 requests since 1 January. The backlog of tagged articles stands at 2,066.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators, Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

MediaWiki message delivery ( talk) 13:55, 10 September 2023 (UTC) reply

Nomination for deletion of Template:Kerala State Film Awards intro

Template:Kerala State Film Awards intro has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the entry on the Templates for discussion page. The Doom Patrol ( talk) 12:15, 28 October 2023 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors December 2023 Newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors December 2023 Newsletter

Hello, and welcome to the December 2023 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since September. Don't forget that you can unsubscribe at any time; see below.

Election news: The Guild needs coordinators! If you'd like to help out, you may nominate yourself or any suitable editor—with their permission—for the Election of Coordinators for the first half of 2024. Nominations will close at 23:59 on 15 December (UTC). Voting begins immediately after the close of nominations and closes at 23:59 on 31 December. All editors in good standing (not under current sanctions) are eligible, and self-nominations are welcome. Coordinators normally serve a six-month term that ends at 23:59 on 30 June.

Drive: Of the 69 editors who signed up for the September Backlog Elimination Drive, 40 copy-edited at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 661,214 words in 290 articles. Barnstars awarded are listed here.

Blitz: Of the 22 editors who signed up for the October Copy Editing Blitz, 13 copy-edited at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 109,327 words in 52 articles. Barnstars awarded are listed here.

Drive: During the November Backlog Elimination Drive, 38 of the 58 editors who signed up copy-edited at least one article. Between them, they copy-edited 458,620 words in 234 articles. Barnstars awarded are listed here.

Blitz: Our December Copy Editing Blitz will run from 10 to 16 December. Barnstars awarded will be posted here.

Progress report: As of 20:33, 10 December 2023 (UTC), GOCE copyeditors have processed 344 requests since 1 January, and the backlog stands at 2,191 articles.

Other news: Our Annual Report for 2023 is planned for release in the new year.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from your GOCE coordinators Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Zippybonzo.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Message sent by Baffle gab1978 using MediaWiki message delivery ( talk) 20:54, 10 December 2023 (UTC) reply

Guild of Copy Editors 2023 Annual Report

Guild of Copy Editors 2023 Annual Report

Our 2023 Annual Report is now ready for review.

Highlights:

  • Introduction
  • Membership news, obituary and election results
  • Summary of Drives, Blitzes and the Requests page
  • Closing words
– Your Guild coordinators: Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Wracking.
To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

Guild of Copy Editors April 2024 Newsletter

Guild of Copy Editors April 2024 Newsletter

Hello and welcome to the April 2024 newsletter, a quarterly digest of Guild activities since December. Don't forget you can unsubscribe at any time; see below. We extend a warm welcome to all of our new members. We wish you all happy copy-editing.

Election results: In our December 2023 coordinator election, Zippybonzo stepped down as coordinator; we thank them for their service. Incumbents Dhtwiki and Miniapolis were reelected coordinators, and Wracking was newly elected coordinator, to serve through 30 June. Nominations for our mid-year Election of Coordinators will open on 1 June (UTC).

Drive: 46 editors signed up for our January Backlog Elimination Drive, 32 of whom claimed at least one copy-edit. Between them, they copy-edited 289 articles totaling 626,729 words. Barnstars awarded are here.

Blitz: 23 editors signed up for our February Copy Editing Blitz. 18 claimed at least one copy-edit and between them, they copy-edited 100,293 words in 32 articles. Barnstars awarded are here.

Drive: 53 editors signed up for our March Backlog Elimination Drive, 34 of whom claimed at least one copy-edit. Between them, they copy-edited 300 articles totaling 587,828 words. Barnstars awarded are here.

Blitz: Sign up for our April Copy Editing Blitz, which runs from 14 to 20 April. Barnstars will be awarded here.

Progress report: As of 23:17, 11 April 2024 (UTC), GOCE copyeditors have processed 109 requests since 1 January 2024, and the backlog stands at 2,480 articles.

Thank you all again for your participation; we wouldn't be able to achieve what we have without you! Cheers from Baffle gab1978 and your GOCE coordinators Dhtwiki, Miniapolis and Wracking.

To discontinue receiving GOCE newsletters, please remove your name from our mailing list.

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