The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
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Category:Hidden Champion
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale:Delete. This is essentially an
arbitrary category, based mostly on a business/marketing theory espoused by single individual,
Hermann Simon, rather than a notable and recognized type of company.
Dbratland (
talk)
21:40, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
I'd like to know which sources specifically use this term, and what their definitions of it are. Most of your citations are to open Wikis, like German Wikipedia. These footnotes should be removed from
Hidden Champions, since they fail the criteria for
WP:RS, and replaced with citations of the actual sources. Other than citing Wikipedia, there are articles such as one from Business Week
[1], which defines "hidden champions" as having "superior growth, financial strength, global reach, and consistent innovation, according to a study carried out by the Bonn Institute for the Study of Medium-Sized Companies". This is completely different from Simon's three criteria (market share, revenue, and public awareness), and only underscores that while the term "hidden champion" might be somewhat current, the definition of the term is arbitrary. --
Dbratland (
talk)
23:35, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
If you read the newsweek more seriously, you'll find that your citation doesn't give a definition but a description of typically ones. The difference between you may find out reading the article. A few sentences later in newsweek you find a reference to Herman Simon. You should be happy to find a business therm defined that precise because mostly it is not. --
Tasma3197 (
talk)
12:26, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Delete The list in the article is already a big problem given that half of the references are to foreign-language Wikipedia editions. I don't think this should have a category until the idea and its application see a wider consensus.
Mangoe (
talk)
23:32, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Delete Agreed. I've done quite a bit of work on one of the pages recently added to this category and don't see how it's a useful categorisation at all. The critreria are far too subjective and it's clearly being used for spam.
Letsplaydrums (
talk)
11:16, 9 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Isle of Man geographical coordinates
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Nominator's rationale:Delete. Not a useful category. If someone wants to see all Manx coordinates, a complete report can be obtained using
[2]. The category is incomplete and more difficult to maintain. Besides, shouldn't ALL geographical features (i.e.
Category:Geography of the Isle of Man have geographical coordinates?
Stepheng3 (
talk)
19:34, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Black peoples in art
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Rename. While there are instances where such double plurals are correct (for instance, to refer collectively to two or more societies of "black" people) the category in question is not such an instance. —
Stepheng3 (
talk)
19:47, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Support. While there is a clear and useful difference in meaning of the words people and peoples, the category does not seem to contact articles concerning separate peoples, just different people. --
SmokeyJoe (
talk)
21:14, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Strong Rename to
Category:African-American people in art since that is what they all are, & that is a valid category. Widening beyond that is unwise - for a start there is all of African art, which should logically be a sub otherwise. We don't have any other "black people/s" categories, and a look at the TOC of
Black people shows why.
Johnbod (
talk)
03:07, 8 March 2011 (UTC)reply
That might reflect a systematic bias of editors. I suppose indigenous Australians and Melanesians in art should be in a separate categories, because the art is not closely related. --
SmokeyJoe (
talk)
12:26, 8 March 2011 (UTC)reply
When I looked at the contents of the category, I concluded that it is for art depicting black people, regardless of who created it. —
Stepheng3 (
talk)
03:21, 13 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Limbu family names
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Nominator's rationale:Rename to match the convention for similar categories. The other option is to delete since the sole article in the category is in fact a userspace page that would possibly be deleted if it was sent to AfD.
Pichpich (
talk)
15:50, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Disputed biographies of living persons
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Rename just the first ("Disputed biographies of living persons"), please. Renaming "Living people" is a really big deal and should only ever be done if it's absolutely necessary and completely unavoidable. --
MZMcBride (
talk)
15:34, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
If consistency is truly that vital, sure, rename the first.
However, the category had two pages in it until I removed one because the tag was three years old and the editor who was entering the disputed information has not been heard from in three years. The other page is in a template's archive.
I do not think the matter is worth the effort that has already been expended much less the effort that would be involved in a rename, with its accompanying redirect.
JimCubb (
talk)
02:53, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
No change. a) people and persons aren't exact synonyms, so I have no problem with the "inconsistency" of the naming b) DBoLP is a very lightly used hidden administrative category, so effectively no one sees it making the "inconsistency" a distinction without a difference.
Studerby (
talk)
19:30, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Not the alternative please. We already get the occasional glitch when people categorise a rock group or some other article that contains info on living people into these categories, this sort of renaming would only encourage that and that would make processes like the death anomalies problematic to say the least. No objection to the original suggestion re
Category:Disputed biographies of living peopleϢereSpielChequers12:34, 9 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:American military personnel by war sub-category standardizxation and proper inclusion
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the discussion was:New split discussion. As there's been no further discussion and uncertainty, whilst a "no consensus" close will not really solve anything, I'm going to nominate the two remaining categories separately.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
14:35, 22 March 2011 (UTC)reply
However the American Revolution and (especially) the American Civil War categories are more problematic because of inconsistent use of the term "American" in the structure. They are best relisted for further discussion.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
12:32, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale, the parent category states that people in the American military personnel category and its sub-categories are people who served in the Military of the United States or people who served in the Patriot forces in the American Revolution. Thus Confederate States Army soldiers, who are by definition people fighting against the United States military, do not belong in this category. The question is not the nationality of the military personnel, but the national affiliation of the military body in which said soldier is serving. The Boxer Rebellion, American Revolution and War of 1812 name changes are to bring uniformity of the names within this category and with names in other military personnel categories.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
23:30, 25 February 2011 (UTC)reply
Request clarification, I'm reading the CSA soldiers request to mean keep the category, while removing it from
Category:American military personnel, which I would not have thought required a CFD entry. (The same comment would apply to the "Remove any other people..." item. What does that actually mean in CFD terms?)
Fat&Happy (
talk)
03:19, 27 February 2011 (UTC)reply
I guess it is probably true that removing
Category:Confederate Army Soldiers can be done without a category discussion, but putting it through discussion seemed logical to me. I guess I had not considered that it is a simple matter to recategorize categories. I will do that since no one has objected to doing so.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
03:04, 1 March 2011 (UTC)reply
I feel
Category:Military personnel of the American Civil War should be at the top of a tree, with primary sub-cats for Confederate military personnel and Union/American/United States (pick one) military personnel. I just browsed around a bit and decided the entire ACW hierarchy is a gigantic cluster-f**k, exacerbated by the ambiguity of the term "American"; in particular, "American Civil War foos" can be taken to mean the all-inclusive "Foos of the American Civil War", or the more ambiguous "American Foos of the Civil War". Check the parent categories of
Category:Confederate States Army officers for an example of why I described the situation as I did.
Fat&Happy (
talk)
05:06, 1 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Confederates should not be eliminated from this category structure, any more than the Confederacy is to be eliminated from the History of the United States. There was a rebellion, some Americans joined the rebellion and later they stopped. They were still Americans, regardless.
Hmains (
talk)
03:48, 1 March 2011 (UTC)reply
"American military personnel" is being used to mean "people in the military forces of the United States". If an American goes and joins the Taliban forces they may still be an American but they are clearly not "American Military personnel". This is also the case with the CSA forces.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
03:03, 3 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Fat and Happy, I was also getting the sense that there is an unjustified non-distinguishing between sides. We could try to avoid some confusion by calling one side Yankees, but that would probably be a bit much for members of US (Colored) regiments who in many cases never marched north of the Ohio/Potomac. The same could be said for many of the more of less white residents of Louisiana and Arkansas who supported the Union cause.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
03:07, 3 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Various -- Unionist and Confederate personnel of the American Civil War should be kept separate. Care should also be taken that British (and American loyalist) personnel of the American War of Independence do not get merged into an American (seceding states) category. More Generally, WP uses "United States" as an adjective, because Canadians and Mexicans are also Americans.
Peterkingiron (
talk)
16:13, 4 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Comment. As, of course, are Guatemalans, Tierra del Fuegans, and everybody in between. As well as, if we follow the British – European example, Cubans, Haitians and a host of other islanders. But for whatever reason (historical dominance; brashness; the difficulty of pronouncing "Unitedstatesian"?), "American" is understood pretty much worldwide to apply to the U.S.
This part of the discussion, though, makes me support keeping "United States Military" as the prefix for these categories in preference to "American Military", since as a corollary to U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, etc. it is less ambiguous in its reference to the military itself rather than the nationality of individuals.
Note there are only four wars mentioned. The Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War, WOrld War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Iraq Wars and maybe some other conflicts all use "American". Beyond this there is
Category:American military chaplains and a whole set of other subcategories of the overall
Category:American military personnell. I made a nomination to rename the whole category to use United States instead of American, but it was opposed (by one person, but no one else said anything), and since American was already the majority position in the categories, I just went with the change. The name of the country is "the United States of America" sort of like there was "the United Provinces of the Nethelands". Both assert that they create a union of the identified land. To make things worse in Brazil they are the United States and so insit on calling the country that includes Detroit and Chicago to "United States of the North". In the United States people sing "I love my land America" and "America the Beutiful" and do not intend to include Mexico, let alone Canada, in the purvey of the song. However, as I hope I have made clear, I really do not care what the result of this discussion is, we just have to agree on a univeral set of terms for all the subcategories. The Civil War and the American Revolution are a bit tricky, but the War of 1812 and the Boxer Rebellion should not be. It should also be remembered that a man born in Japan who served in the US military during World War II belong in
Category:American military personnel of World War II (or whatever it ends up being named) while a man who graduated from high school in Hawai'i but then went to join the military in Japan which his parents had not been to since they were little children and subsequently was involved in the bombing run on Pearl Harbor (I know there was at least one case that specificly fits this description) belongs in
Category:Japanese military personnel of World War II. The question is what military were the people in, not what their "ethnicity", "nationality" or even "citisenship" was. Thus, this is not exactly an analogous sub-category to most Fooian fooers categories. This is technically Fooers of the Fooian Foo. That is people who were x in the Fooian Thing. Thus maybe Personnel of the American military during Conflict X would be a better form. However
Category:Personnel of the American military during World War II just seems a bit akward. It might eliminate some of the ambiguity. Thus
Category:Personnel of the American military during the American Civil War would be fairly clear that CSA Soldiers do not belong. Some may say "is not the double use of American redundant", I would say "no more than
Category:Spanish military personnel of the War of the Spanish Succession or as we would not have to make it
Category:Personnel of the SPanish Military during the War of the Spanish Succession.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
20:13, 5 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Drainage systems of Australia
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale: The parent categories all refer to “Drainage Basin” and many (perhaps half) of the ariicles and subcategories refer to "Basin”, though several refer to "Division”.
Hugo999 (
talk)
10:05, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Support. The category, as it stood at the time of proposal, was not fit for re-naming. I've taken the opportunity to put a few categories and articles into the parent category of
Category:Endorheic basins of Australia. The remaining sub-cats and articles now meet the criteria for drainage basins and so the re-naming can proceed.
Laurel Lodged (
talk)
17:37, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Query Would it not be accurate to say that, in effect, each of the 12 Divisions is no more than a grouping of things that are themselves drainage basins? If so, is this any different to grouping the rivers of the French Riviera and the rivers of the Catalan Region into a parent category of drainage basins of the Mediteranean? The Australian category would contain articles describing how the basins are organised, as opposed to containing sub-categories of articles of how they are organised.
Laurel Lodged (
talk)
19:40, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Possible bogus articles
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deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
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Category:WikiProject Massively multiplayer online games templates
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deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale: This WikiProject is gone. Its category contains only a template which belongs under the watch of WP Video Games, and a template which is at TfD. This category is no longer needed. — This, that, and the other (talk)03:15, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Alumnae of women's universities and colleges
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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The result of the discussion was:rename all to use the term "alumni" rather than than "alumnae". The argument in favour alumnae is that it is the correct Latin term to use when referring to a solely-female group. However, most editors were persuaded by the counter-arguments, the most significant of which is that when used in English, Latin terms follow the rules of English, which does not routinely use a gendered form and where current practice is increasingly to drop gendered forms of words (e.g. "actresses" has fallen out of favour). Subsidiary arguments were that differential formats place an extra burden on editors and readers, because knowledge of whether to use "alunmi" or "alumnae" depends on knowing whether the institution has always been 100% female.
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
16:44, 22 March 2011 (UTC)reply
There's never been any consistency on whether to use "alumni" or "alumnae" for the former students of all-female universities and colleges. In Latin "alumni" is the plural for either all male or mixed-gender groups, "alumnae" is the plural for all female groups. However English generally doesn't have such a distinction and incorporated words tend to take English rules.
There's also no consistency by country with these categories; both lists contain institutions in India, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Since there are more alumni than alumnae categories, and we can't say for sure that all alumns of a women's university/college are still female, my preference is for Or - Rename to alumni.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
01:04, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumni". In a way, using "alumnae" for some categories creates an additional burden on users (who are adding the category to an article) to know which schools are all-female and which are not. I don't think creating or maintaining the distinction is worth the hassle. (Whichever is chosen, we should use category redirects on the alternative forms, which should help.)
Good Ol’factory(talk)23:48, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumni". As an alumnus of Wellesley College, of course I have a personal stake in this: using "alumnae" for graduates of a historically women's college that also has graduated male students renders me and others like me invisible. Since it is impossible to determine which putative women's colleges have students and alums who are men (presumably trans men in most cases, like my own), and which don't, the simplest solution is to use the gender-neutral "alumni".
SparsityProblem (
talk)
01:12, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Look, I understand that this is perhaps the only social space in the world where irrespective of social context, "anyone can edit". Also I appreciate its being a "high bar" as you put it. If you were to check the number of articles on the alumni/ae of these colleges, it would appear that for all their impressive history and the quality of their alumni, there are actually fewer editors (compared to the number of editors on women’s colleges in the West) that contribute to the articles on Calcutta's all-women's colleges and the people associated with them. It would appear that the ladies themselves are not remotely concerned on whether the nomenclature is appropriate Latin or bad English. My point on wanting to maintain the existing tag was different. Calcutta’s all-women colleges have as I mentioned, always been women’s colleges, and there is the remotest possibility of their being gender neutral institutions. In fact seen in context, their sole reason for existence is their being women’s colleges. Also ideas on gender neutrality (in the sense that using “alumnae” and not “alumni” is somehow discriminatory towards Calcutta’s ladies) have to be seen in context. I can assure you that like anywhere else, Calcutta’s ladies enjoy every opportunity to be ahead of the game and enjoy the spotlight (!). Unless there is a sudden upsurge of information on the alumni/ae on Calcutta’s women’s colleges, and editors who make meaningful contributions, it would be proper to let things remain as they are.
Patoldanga'r Tenida (
talk)
05:45, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
My argument has nothing to do with discrimination based on gender. I'm focusing more on ease of editing the encyclopedia and predictability and consistency within category trees. It just seems to me that if either term may properly be used, we may as well use "alumni", because using the other term will require editors who are wanting to add the category to realise that particular schools are all-female.
Good Ol’factory(talk)20:59, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumnae of ..." as per first suggestion when it is an all-female intake. Alumna/Alumnae =accurate for females. Alumnus/Alumni = inaccurate. The definition is clear in both Websters & Chambers dictionary. An encyclopaedia should reflect terms accurately and not fall for the temptation of being illiterate for the sake of simplicity. If we have problems using borrowed Latin terms then we should use an English term where one exists. E.g. Graduate is equally good and does not need declining.
Ephebi (
talk)
16:24, 11 March 2011 (UTC)reply
As long as we are talking about accuracy and literacy: "alumni" do not need to be graduates; the term can refer to any person who attended the school, graduates and non-graduates.
Good Ol’factory(talk)01:10, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Good point assuming that we would want to include women who have not graduated, in which case "Alumnae of ..." (if we want Latin) or "Former students of..." (for English) would fit the bill. But is that assumption correct, e.g. that it would be meaningful to categorise under-graduates and drop-outs?
Ephebi (
talk)
12:49, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
It's the assumption of the whole alumni category tree. But also in past times there were a lot of people who didn't formally graduate from university and/or get a degree - see
Wikipedia talk:College and university article guidelines#Alumni for details on this. This a particular issue for the older Cambridge colleges as there was a long struggle to get the university to admit women to its full degrees and the result was that for decades women were going through a complete course of study at colleges like Newnham but were unable to graduate. In 1921 they were allowed "degrees titular" of limited standing but it wasn't until the late 1940s that they could properly graduate. And "alumni" may originate in Latin but it's been used in English for so long that it is now an English word.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
13:13, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
This doesn't seem to address the point that some self-styled women's colleges have male alums: for example, trans men who were admitted while presenting as female. It's nearly impossible to know whether a so-called women's college has alums who later came out as male -- a good argument for using the term "alumni", which refers to a mixed-gender group.
SparsityProblem (
talk)
19:36, 15 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumni". In current English, the residual latinate gender markings are rapidly eroding; I know the very vast majority of American college graduates couldn't properly decline a Latin noun beyond the nominative case; no English speaker actually uses "alumnarum" or "alumnorum" in English and the percentage that know these forms is miniscule. "Alumni" is rapidly becoming the gender and count neutral term for "former student(s) of ...". There's a large industry producing "School X Alumni" bumper stickers; googling "alumni bumper sticker" returns 2 million hits, whereas "alumnus bumper sticker" returns 100 thousand. If the latinate declension were still standard English, then "alumni" bumper stickers wouldn't have much of a market.
Studerby (
talk)
20:27, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
change all to alumni. The general trend is towards gender-neutral terms. We use actors to designate males and females. In actual use actresses is a much more common term than alumnae. I would say the "still female" issue is irrlevant. First because sex-change is a very rare occurance, but more importantly because arguably the category is applying the term to people at graduation, not later.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
00:54, 19 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Why does the supposed size of a group of people (trans people are 1% of the population by many estimates, btw) play into whether it's OK to pretend they don't exist? The "still female" part is a red herring, I agree, because trans men are always men (even when they're seen by the rest of the world as women).
SparsityProblem (
talk)
17:12, 21 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Smith College clearly should not be one of the schools uinder discussion here. In the article on Smith College it states "Smith offers men and women graduate work leading to the degrees of master of arts in teaching (elementary, middle or high school), master of fine arts, master of education of the deaf, master of science in biological sciences, master of science in exercise and sport studies and master and Ph.D. in social work. In special one-year programs, international students may qualify for a certificate of graduate studies or a diploma in American studies. Each year approximately 100 men and women pursue advanced graduate work at Smith." Thus is is clear that there are male students admitted to Smith on a regular basis.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
01:06, 19 March 2011 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Category:Hidden Champion
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale:Delete. This is essentially an
arbitrary category, based mostly on a business/marketing theory espoused by single individual,
Hermann Simon, rather than a notable and recognized type of company.
Dbratland (
talk)
21:40, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
I'd like to know which sources specifically use this term, and what their definitions of it are. Most of your citations are to open Wikis, like German Wikipedia. These footnotes should be removed from
Hidden Champions, since they fail the criteria for
WP:RS, and replaced with citations of the actual sources. Other than citing Wikipedia, there are articles such as one from Business Week
[1], which defines "hidden champions" as having "superior growth, financial strength, global reach, and consistent innovation, according to a study carried out by the Bonn Institute for the Study of Medium-Sized Companies". This is completely different from Simon's three criteria (market share, revenue, and public awareness), and only underscores that while the term "hidden champion" might be somewhat current, the definition of the term is arbitrary. --
Dbratland (
talk)
23:35, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
If you read the newsweek more seriously, you'll find that your citation doesn't give a definition but a description of typically ones. The difference between you may find out reading the article. A few sentences later in newsweek you find a reference to Herman Simon. You should be happy to find a business therm defined that precise because mostly it is not. --
Tasma3197 (
talk)
12:26, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Delete The list in the article is already a big problem given that half of the references are to foreign-language Wikipedia editions. I don't think this should have a category until the idea and its application see a wider consensus.
Mangoe (
talk)
23:32, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Delete Agreed. I've done quite a bit of work on one of the pages recently added to this category and don't see how it's a useful categorisation at all. The critreria are far too subjective and it's clearly being used for spam.
Letsplaydrums (
talk)
11:16, 9 March 2011 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Category:Isle of Man geographical coordinates
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale:Delete. Not a useful category. If someone wants to see all Manx coordinates, a complete report can be obtained using
[2]. The category is incomplete and more difficult to maintain. Besides, shouldn't ALL geographical features (i.e.
Category:Geography of the Isle of Man have geographical coordinates?
Stepheng3 (
talk)
19:34, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Category:Black peoples in art
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Rename. While there are instances where such double plurals are correct (for instance, to refer collectively to two or more societies of "black" people) the category in question is not such an instance. —
Stepheng3 (
talk)
19:47, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Support. While there is a clear and useful difference in meaning of the words people and peoples, the category does not seem to contact articles concerning separate peoples, just different people. --
SmokeyJoe (
talk)
21:14, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Strong Rename to
Category:African-American people in art since that is what they all are, & that is a valid category. Widening beyond that is unwise - for a start there is all of African art, which should logically be a sub otherwise. We don't have any other "black people/s" categories, and a look at the TOC of
Black people shows why.
Johnbod (
talk)
03:07, 8 March 2011 (UTC)reply
That might reflect a systematic bias of editors. I suppose indigenous Australians and Melanesians in art should be in a separate categories, because the art is not closely related. --
SmokeyJoe (
talk)
12:26, 8 March 2011 (UTC)reply
When I looked at the contents of the category, I concluded that it is for art depicting black people, regardless of who created it. —
Stepheng3 (
talk)
03:21, 13 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Limbu family names
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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Nominator's rationale:Rename to match the convention for similar categories. The other option is to delete since the sole article in the category is in fact a userspace page that would possibly be deleted if it was sent to AfD.
Pichpich (
talk)
15:50, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Disputed biographies of living persons
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Rename just the first ("Disputed biographies of living persons"), please. Renaming "Living people" is a really big deal and should only ever be done if it's absolutely necessary and completely unavoidable. --
MZMcBride (
talk)
15:34, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
If consistency is truly that vital, sure, rename the first.
However, the category had two pages in it until I removed one because the tag was three years old and the editor who was entering the disputed information has not been heard from in three years. The other page is in a template's archive.
I do not think the matter is worth the effort that has already been expended much less the effort that would be involved in a rename, with its accompanying redirect.
JimCubb (
talk)
02:53, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
No change. a) people and persons aren't exact synonyms, so I have no problem with the "inconsistency" of the naming b) DBoLP is a very lightly used hidden administrative category, so effectively no one sees it making the "inconsistency" a distinction without a difference.
Studerby (
talk)
19:30, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Not the alternative please. We already get the occasional glitch when people categorise a rock group or some other article that contains info on living people into these categories, this sort of renaming would only encourage that and that would make processes like the death anomalies problematic to say the least. No objection to the original suggestion re
Category:Disputed biographies of living peopleϢereSpielChequers12:34, 9 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:American military personnel by war sub-category standardizxation and proper inclusion
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the discussion was:New split discussion. As there's been no further discussion and uncertainty, whilst a "no consensus" close will not really solve anything, I'm going to nominate the two remaining categories separately.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
14:35, 22 March 2011 (UTC)reply
However the American Revolution and (especially) the American Civil War categories are more problematic because of inconsistent use of the term "American" in the structure. They are best relisted for further discussion.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
12:32, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Nominator's rationale, the parent category states that people in the American military personnel category and its sub-categories are people who served in the Military of the United States or people who served in the Patriot forces in the American Revolution. Thus Confederate States Army soldiers, who are by definition people fighting against the United States military, do not belong in this category. The question is not the nationality of the military personnel, but the national affiliation of the military body in which said soldier is serving. The Boxer Rebellion, American Revolution and War of 1812 name changes are to bring uniformity of the names within this category and with names in other military personnel categories.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
23:30, 25 February 2011 (UTC)reply
Request clarification, I'm reading the CSA soldiers request to mean keep the category, while removing it from
Category:American military personnel, which I would not have thought required a CFD entry. (The same comment would apply to the "Remove any other people..." item. What does that actually mean in CFD terms?)
Fat&Happy (
talk)
03:19, 27 February 2011 (UTC)reply
I guess it is probably true that removing
Category:Confederate Army Soldiers can be done without a category discussion, but putting it through discussion seemed logical to me. I guess I had not considered that it is a simple matter to recategorize categories. I will do that since no one has objected to doing so.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
03:04, 1 March 2011 (UTC)reply
I feel
Category:Military personnel of the American Civil War should be at the top of a tree, with primary sub-cats for Confederate military personnel and Union/American/United States (pick one) military personnel. I just browsed around a bit and decided the entire ACW hierarchy is a gigantic cluster-f**k, exacerbated by the ambiguity of the term "American"; in particular, "American Civil War foos" can be taken to mean the all-inclusive "Foos of the American Civil War", or the more ambiguous "American Foos of the Civil War". Check the parent categories of
Category:Confederate States Army officers for an example of why I described the situation as I did.
Fat&Happy (
talk)
05:06, 1 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Confederates should not be eliminated from this category structure, any more than the Confederacy is to be eliminated from the History of the United States. There was a rebellion, some Americans joined the rebellion and later they stopped. They were still Americans, regardless.
Hmains (
talk)
03:48, 1 March 2011 (UTC)reply
"American military personnel" is being used to mean "people in the military forces of the United States". If an American goes and joins the Taliban forces they may still be an American but they are clearly not "American Military personnel". This is also the case with the CSA forces.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
03:03, 3 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Fat and Happy, I was also getting the sense that there is an unjustified non-distinguishing between sides. We could try to avoid some confusion by calling one side Yankees, but that would probably be a bit much for members of US (Colored) regiments who in many cases never marched north of the Ohio/Potomac. The same could be said for many of the more of less white residents of Louisiana and Arkansas who supported the Union cause.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
03:07, 3 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Various -- Unionist and Confederate personnel of the American Civil War should be kept separate. Care should also be taken that British (and American loyalist) personnel of the American War of Independence do not get merged into an American (seceding states) category. More Generally, WP uses "United States" as an adjective, because Canadians and Mexicans are also Americans.
Peterkingiron (
talk)
16:13, 4 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Comment. As, of course, are Guatemalans, Tierra del Fuegans, and everybody in between. As well as, if we follow the British – European example, Cubans, Haitians and a host of other islanders. But for whatever reason (historical dominance; brashness; the difficulty of pronouncing "Unitedstatesian"?), "American" is understood pretty much worldwide to apply to the U.S.
This part of the discussion, though, makes me support keeping "United States Military" as the prefix for these categories in preference to "American Military", since as a corollary to U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, etc. it is less ambiguous in its reference to the military itself rather than the nationality of individuals.
Note there are only four wars mentioned. The Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War, WOrld War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Iraq Wars and maybe some other conflicts all use "American". Beyond this there is
Category:American military chaplains and a whole set of other subcategories of the overall
Category:American military personnell. I made a nomination to rename the whole category to use United States instead of American, but it was opposed (by one person, but no one else said anything), and since American was already the majority position in the categories, I just went with the change. The name of the country is "the United States of America" sort of like there was "the United Provinces of the Nethelands". Both assert that they create a union of the identified land. To make things worse in Brazil they are the United States and so insit on calling the country that includes Detroit and Chicago to "United States of the North". In the United States people sing "I love my land America" and "America the Beutiful" and do not intend to include Mexico, let alone Canada, in the purvey of the song. However, as I hope I have made clear, I really do not care what the result of this discussion is, we just have to agree on a univeral set of terms for all the subcategories. The Civil War and the American Revolution are a bit tricky, but the War of 1812 and the Boxer Rebellion should not be. It should also be remembered that a man born in Japan who served in the US military during World War II belong in
Category:American military personnel of World War II (or whatever it ends up being named) while a man who graduated from high school in Hawai'i but then went to join the military in Japan which his parents had not been to since they were little children and subsequently was involved in the bombing run on Pearl Harbor (I know there was at least one case that specificly fits this description) belongs in
Category:Japanese military personnel of World War II. The question is what military were the people in, not what their "ethnicity", "nationality" or even "citisenship" was. Thus, this is not exactly an analogous sub-category to most Fooian fooers categories. This is technically Fooers of the Fooian Foo. That is people who were x in the Fooian Thing. Thus maybe Personnel of the American military during Conflict X would be a better form. However
Category:Personnel of the American military during World War II just seems a bit akward. It might eliminate some of the ambiguity. Thus
Category:Personnel of the American military during the American Civil War would be fairly clear that CSA Soldiers do not belong. Some may say "is not the double use of American redundant", I would say "no more than
Category:Spanish military personnel of the War of the Spanish Succession or as we would not have to make it
Category:Personnel of the SPanish Military during the War of the Spanish Succession.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
20:13, 5 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Drainage systems of Australia
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale: The parent categories all refer to “Drainage Basin” and many (perhaps half) of the ariicles and subcategories refer to "Basin”, though several refer to "Division”.
Hugo999 (
talk)
10:05, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Support. The category, as it stood at the time of proposal, was not fit for re-naming. I've taken the opportunity to put a few categories and articles into the parent category of
Category:Endorheic basins of Australia. The remaining sub-cats and articles now meet the criteria for drainage basins and so the re-naming can proceed.
Laurel Lodged (
talk)
17:37, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Query Would it not be accurate to say that, in effect, each of the 12 Divisions is no more than a grouping of things that are themselves drainage basins? If so, is this any different to grouping the rivers of the French Riviera and the rivers of the Catalan Region into a parent category of drainage basins of the Mediteranean? The Australian category would contain articles describing how the basins are organised, as opposed to containing sub-categories of articles of how they are organised.
Laurel Lodged (
talk)
19:40, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Category:Possible bogus articles
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deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
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Category:WikiProject Massively multiplayer online games templates
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deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Nominator's rationale: This WikiProject is gone. Its category contains only a template which belongs under the watch of WP Video Games, and a template which is at TfD. This category is no longer needed. — This, that, and the other (talk)03:15, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
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Alumnae of women's universities and colleges
The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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The result of the discussion was:rename all to use the term "alumni" rather than than "alumnae". The argument in favour alumnae is that it is the correct Latin term to use when referring to a solely-female group. However, most editors were persuaded by the counter-arguments, the most significant of which is that when used in English, Latin terms follow the rules of English, which does not routinely use a gendered form and where current practice is increasingly to drop gendered forms of words (e.g. "actresses" has fallen out of favour). Subsidiary arguments were that differential formats place an extra burden on editors and readers, because knowledge of whether to use "alunmi" or "alumnae" depends on knowing whether the institution has always been 100% female.
BrownHairedGirl(talk) • (
contribs)
16:44, 22 March 2011 (UTC)reply
There's never been any consistency on whether to use "alumni" or "alumnae" for the former students of all-female universities and colleges. In Latin "alumni" is the plural for either all male or mixed-gender groups, "alumnae" is the plural for all female groups. However English generally doesn't have such a distinction and incorporated words tend to take English rules.
There's also no consistency by country with these categories; both lists contain institutions in India, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Since there are more alumni than alumnae categories, and we can't say for sure that all alumns of a women's university/college are still female, my preference is for Or - Rename to alumni.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
01:04, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumni". In a way, using "alumnae" for some categories creates an additional burden on users (who are adding the category to an article) to know which schools are all-female and which are not. I don't think creating or maintaining the distinction is worth the hassle. (Whichever is chosen, we should use category redirects on the alternative forms, which should help.)
Good Ol’factory(talk)23:48, 6 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumni". As an alumnus of Wellesley College, of course I have a personal stake in this: using "alumnae" for graduates of a historically women's college that also has graduated male students renders me and others like me invisible. Since it is impossible to determine which putative women's colleges have students and alums who are men (presumably trans men in most cases, like my own), and which don't, the simplest solution is to use the gender-neutral "alumni".
SparsityProblem (
talk)
01:12, 7 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Look, I understand that this is perhaps the only social space in the world where irrespective of social context, "anyone can edit". Also I appreciate its being a "high bar" as you put it. If you were to check the number of articles on the alumni/ae of these colleges, it would appear that for all their impressive history and the quality of their alumni, there are actually fewer editors (compared to the number of editors on women’s colleges in the West) that contribute to the articles on Calcutta's all-women's colleges and the people associated with them. It would appear that the ladies themselves are not remotely concerned on whether the nomenclature is appropriate Latin or bad English. My point on wanting to maintain the existing tag was different. Calcutta’s all-women colleges have as I mentioned, always been women’s colleges, and there is the remotest possibility of their being gender neutral institutions. In fact seen in context, their sole reason for existence is their being women’s colleges. Also ideas on gender neutrality (in the sense that using “alumnae” and not “alumni” is somehow discriminatory towards Calcutta’s ladies) have to be seen in context. I can assure you that like anywhere else, Calcutta’s ladies enjoy every opportunity to be ahead of the game and enjoy the spotlight (!). Unless there is a sudden upsurge of information on the alumni/ae on Calcutta’s women’s colleges, and editors who make meaningful contributions, it would be proper to let things remain as they are.
Patoldanga'r Tenida (
talk)
05:45, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
My argument has nothing to do with discrimination based on gender. I'm focusing more on ease of editing the encyclopedia and predictability and consistency within category trees. It just seems to me that if either term may properly be used, we may as well use "alumni", because using the other term will require editors who are wanting to add the category to realise that particular schools are all-female.
Good Ol’factory(talk)20:59, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumnae of ..." as per first suggestion when it is an all-female intake. Alumna/Alumnae =accurate for females. Alumnus/Alumni = inaccurate. The definition is clear in both Websters & Chambers dictionary. An encyclopaedia should reflect terms accurately and not fall for the temptation of being illiterate for the sake of simplicity. If we have problems using borrowed Latin terms then we should use an English term where one exists. E.g. Graduate is equally good and does not need declining.
Ephebi (
talk)
16:24, 11 March 2011 (UTC)reply
As long as we are talking about accuracy and literacy: "alumni" do not need to be graduates; the term can refer to any person who attended the school, graduates and non-graduates.
Good Ol’factory(talk)01:10, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Good point assuming that we would want to include women who have not graduated, in which case "Alumnae of ..." (if we want Latin) or "Former students of..." (for English) would fit the bill. But is that assumption correct, e.g. that it would be meaningful to categorise under-graduates and drop-outs?
Ephebi (
talk)
12:49, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
It's the assumption of the whole alumni category tree. But also in past times there were a lot of people who didn't formally graduate from university and/or get a degree - see
Wikipedia talk:College and university article guidelines#Alumni for details on this. This a particular issue for the older Cambridge colleges as there was a long struggle to get the university to admit women to its full degrees and the result was that for decades women were going through a complete course of study at colleges like Newnham but were unable to graduate. In 1921 they were allowed "degrees titular" of limited standing but it wasn't until the late 1940s that they could properly graduate. And "alumni" may originate in Latin but it's been used in English for so long that it is now an English word.
Timrollpickering (
talk)
13:13, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
This doesn't seem to address the point that some self-styled women's colleges have male alums: for example, trans men who were admitted while presenting as female. It's nearly impossible to know whether a so-called women's college has alums who later came out as male -- a good argument for using the term "alumni", which refers to a mixed-gender group.
SparsityProblem (
talk)
19:36, 15 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Rename to "alumni". In current English, the residual latinate gender markings are rapidly eroding; I know the very vast majority of American college graduates couldn't properly decline a Latin noun beyond the nominative case; no English speaker actually uses "alumnarum" or "alumnorum" in English and the percentage that know these forms is miniscule. "Alumni" is rapidly becoming the gender and count neutral term for "former student(s) of ...". There's a large industry producing "School X Alumni" bumper stickers; googling "alumni bumper sticker" returns 2 million hits, whereas "alumnus bumper sticker" returns 100 thousand. If the latinate declension were still standard English, then "alumni" bumper stickers wouldn't have much of a market.
Studerby (
talk)
20:27, 14 March 2011 (UTC)reply
change all to alumni. The general trend is towards gender-neutral terms. We use actors to designate males and females. In actual use actresses is a much more common term than alumnae. I would say the "still female" issue is irrlevant. First because sex-change is a very rare occurance, but more importantly because arguably the category is applying the term to people at graduation, not later.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
00:54, 19 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Why does the supposed size of a group of people (trans people are 1% of the population by many estimates, btw) play into whether it's OK to pretend they don't exist? The "still female" part is a red herring, I agree, because trans men are always men (even when they're seen by the rest of the world as women).
SparsityProblem (
talk)
17:12, 21 March 2011 (UTC)reply
Smith College clearly should not be one of the schools uinder discussion here. In the article on Smith College it states "Smith offers men and women graduate work leading to the degrees of master of arts in teaching (elementary, middle or high school), master of fine arts, master of education of the deaf, master of science in biological sciences, master of science in exercise and sport studies and master and Ph.D. in social work. In special one-year programs, international students may qualify for a certificate of graduate studies or a diploma in American studies. Each year approximately 100 men and women pursue advanced graduate work at Smith." Thus is is clear that there are male students admitted to Smith on a regular basis.
John Pack Lambert (
talk)
01:06, 19 March 2011 (UTC)reply
The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a
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