WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles |
---|
|
Miscellaneous |
|
This is a list of Wikipedia articles that correspond to articles in the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, and may have either inadequate or outdated information, or unacknowledged verbatim copying. It was generated in 2006 from the original 1911 topics list. At the time, in most cases, the Wikipedia article was simply annotated with the now-obsolete {{ 1911}} template. Current attribution standards require more precise attribution using inline footnotes. Please:
|wstitle=
or |title=
parameter to any {{
EB1911}} or {{
Cite EB1911}} template. See
this category page for why it's important.|volume=
and |page=
(or |pages=
) in the citation template. Page numbers will be visible in the margin if the Wikisource article is transcluded from Page space. Also, previous editors have sometimes left the page number in a comment.|first=
and |last=
, and |author-link=
where approriate, are provided. Use |first1=
etc. for multiple authors.If the EB article is on more than one page (unless it's just a few lines that happen to cross a page boundary), you should use a general reference and inline {{
sfn}} calls with a |p=
or |pp=
parameter. Otherwise you can choose between that style or simple inline references; sometimes an article will have an established style and you should follow it.
If the article, or a section of it, is badly out of date or has WP:NPOV problems, you can use {{ Update-EB}} to draw attention to that. If the article is essentially unchanged from the original (except additions like a lead paragraph and footnotes), please use {{ EB1911 article with no significant updates}} in the footer (either with or without {{ One source}}). See the documentation pages of these templates for more information.
When done, keep the article on the list, in case we need to make another pass, remove the {{ search}} template, and add a tag to the entry, after any hyphen, as follows:
Some additional markings were added when the list was generated in 2006:
Update: re-verified according to latest citation standards (26 May 2014).
WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles |
---|
|
Miscellaneous |
|
This is a list of Wikipedia articles that correspond to articles in the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, and may have either inadequate or outdated information, or unacknowledged verbatim copying. It was generated in 2006 from the original 1911 topics list. At the time, in most cases, the Wikipedia article was simply annotated with the now-obsolete {{ 1911}} template. Current attribution standards require more precise attribution using inline footnotes. Please:
|wstitle=
or |title=
parameter to any {{
EB1911}} or {{
Cite EB1911}} template. See
this category page for why it's important.|volume=
and |page=
(or |pages=
) in the citation template. Page numbers will be visible in the margin if the Wikisource article is transcluded from Page space. Also, previous editors have sometimes left the page number in a comment.|first=
and |last=
, and |author-link=
where approriate, are provided. Use |first1=
etc. for multiple authors.If the EB article is on more than one page (unless it's just a few lines that happen to cross a page boundary), you should use a general reference and inline {{
sfn}} calls with a |p=
or |pp=
parameter. Otherwise you can choose between that style or simple inline references; sometimes an article will have an established style and you should follow it.
If the article, or a section of it, is badly out of date or has WP:NPOV problems, you can use {{ Update-EB}} to draw attention to that. If the article is essentially unchanged from the original (except additions like a lead paragraph and footnotes), please use {{ EB1911 article with no significant updates}} in the footer (either with or without {{ One source}}). See the documentation pages of these templates for more information.
When done, keep the article on the list, in case we need to make another pass, remove the {{ search}} template, and add a tag to the entry, after any hyphen, as follows:
Some additional markings were added when the list was generated in 2006:
Update: re-verified according to latest citation standards (26 May 2014).