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== Is this a valid disambig page? ==
== Creation story/myth/narrative ==


An article I have watchlisted ] has been turned into a disambig page, with the article that was there previously moved to ]. Added to the new disabig page are ], ] and ]. All three of the 'non-Eliza Smith' articles have been around for a while with no need for a disambig page (particularly one that isn't Eliza Smith). Is this not a case where hatnotes would be preferable to a disambig page, given they have 'natural' disambiguators? (I ask this from a position of complete ignorance on disambig pages, which I rarely get involved with... - ] (]) 09:10, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
A few articles about creation myths are titled "xxx creation narrative" (with xxx being the culture or religion from which it originates, like ]). Others are titled "xxx creation myth" (like ]. Still others are titled "xxx creation story". The problem I see here is that by referring to some articles as narratives and others as myths, we are giving greater credibility to some religions than others, something that we obviously want to avoid per ]. In my opinion, all articles of this type should be titled either "myth", "narrative" or "story", for consistency and equal credibility. What do others think? ] (]) 21:47, 11 April 2014 (UTC)
: The place to ask such questions is usually ], but I can tell you right now that the answer you will get is that this is a perfectly fine disambiguation page. Any person with a given first name and last name is likely to be identifiable by that name, irrespective of whether a middle name (or maiden name) is interposed. If there is an argument that ] is the primary topic of the page, then the disambiguation page can be moved to a "Foo (disambiguation)" title, but it seems unlikely that such a short article on a person prominent so many decades ago would be primary. ] ] 12:49, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
::That's great - thanks very much. I don't think the writer is likely to be the primary (or at least, if she is, it'll be by a very narrow margin and I'd be surprised),but it's good to know. Cheers - ] (]) 12:55, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
:Of course not, but it could become clearer if the Disambiguation page is improved for readability. ] (]) 09:07, 29 November 2024 (UTC)


== Remove UE as a whole. ==
:I agree. The current scheme seems rather biased, and a more uniform scheme would likely be an improvement. Probably "narrative" is neutral and descriptive enough. ] (]) 22:08, 11 April 2014 (UTC)
::I don't mind trying to come up with a consistent word to use for these articles... the fly in the ointment is coming up with one that is seen as being neutral. Editors get very touchy about what term should be used when it comes to articles on their religious beliefs... I ''strongly'' suggest that this also be discussed at ] ] (]) 23:24, 11 April 2014 (UTC)


It makes no sense that anything that has a non-English name is translated in English. I think this should be revised considering that in Québec, we fought tooth and nail to protect our language, and now English Misplaced Pages mindlessly follow the English-language newspapers without ever considering what the majority of French-language newspapers says. ''''']''''' <sup>(] / ])</sup> 04:31, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
:I agree also. Let us suppose that there are two versions of an event. (This might be an issue in a newsroom or in a courtroom.) Let us suppose that I strongly agree with one version, and that I strongly disagree with the other version. I can easily accept a decision to use "narrative" or "story" to apply to each of them simultaneously. If I want to provide evidence for or against one or the other, then that is a separate matter. In an organization which, by its nature, supports one version or the other, words supporting or refuting a version can be expected. However, Misplaced Pages does not, by its nature, support or refute any version of the accounts in question.
:—] (]) 23:56, 11 April 2014 (UTC)
*Disagree. We should follow the sources, the mostly reliable independent secondary sources, should there be conflict on the question amongst the sources. It is not for Misplaced Pages, or its editors, to ascribe levels of credibility to myths/narratives/stories, nor to rank them, nor to declare them of equivalent credibility. --] (]) 02:04, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
::These are creation stories, not alternatives to the ] (which we could maybe also call a narrative, but let's don't go there). It would make no sense to suggest that any of them are more fictional than others, even if different sized groups of English speakers might want to treat them as such. But looking at sources may still be useful. It looks like "story" may be most common for many of them; see , , ; though Japanese and Greek and Hindu and some others are more often referred to as "myth" in English, because they're more foreign to us English speakers. ] (]) 02:41, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:::::Dealing with hard cases, such as near religious adherence to the Big Bang theory, or the overt symbolism devoid of implied authority in the ], and new fangled ] creationism is worthy, and it shows that editorial judgement is best shied away from. The is room for argument, but arguments should reference independent reliable sources, not assertions of Truth. --] (]) 12:54, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
:::Sorry {{User|Dicklyon}}, I'm with {{User|SmokeyJoe}} on this one. The whole point of following usage in reliable sources is so we don't make these judgements — they make them for us. If RS are not consistent in how they refer to creation myths/narratives/stories/whatevers, that's not our fault, nor is it a problem that is ours to fix. We just reflect their usage in our titles, whether it's consistent or not. -]2] 19:23, 18 April 2014 (UTC)


:This Misplaced Pages is written in English. We follow English-language usage. If you prefer to read Misplaced Pages in French, then the link is http://fr.wikipedia.org. ] (]) 04:42, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
*Myth is the neutral and objective scientific term for narratives that are part of systems of religious worship, particularly of those that describe the creation of the world, the technical term is a cosmogonic myth. The technical term should of course be applied to all such narratives. We cannot use the sources blindly in this case because certain religions tend to be described by their followers and others tend to be described by outsiders or even detractors, which creates a bias in the literature if we consider the bulk rather than focus on the specific field of scholarship that focuses on this, namely comparative religion. ] 02:52, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
::English or not, when the French name is the only official one, whether sources use another name is not important. Maybe I'm wrong when it comes to the PLQ, but there are plenty other examples where it's not the case. ''''']''''' <sup>(] / ])</sup> 04:52, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
::Exactly; I'd be happy with myth, but large numbers of English speakers that adhere to Genesis-derived religions might object to calling the Genesis story "myth", which is why we are where we are. How shall we fix it? ] (]) 02:58, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:::>''whether sources use another name is not important''
::Narrative or story is probably the best option, to avoid unnecessarily offending a lot of people. ] (]) 11:10, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:::Well, it is. Per the policy, ''"Misplaced Pages does not necessarily use the subject's official name as an article title; it generally prefers the name that is most commonly used (as determined by its prevalence in a significant majority of independent, reliable, English-language sources.)"''
::I agree that narrative or story are accurate, neutral and less likely to offend. ] ≠ ] 11:42, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:::I seriously doubt that you'll find consensus to change that. ] (]) 05:00, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
*Thanks for calling attention to this situation, Rwenonah. It's clear there has been ] at work here. The article ] lists several dozen creation stories, but pointedly does NOT list the Judeo-Christian/Genesis stories such as ] (although those stories are categorized under ] and in some cases under ], and are referred to in some places as "Abrahamic myths").<br>So what to call them? Most such articles are currently called "Foo creation myth". I didn't find any called "Foo creation story", although I may have missed them. "Creation story" and "Creation narrative" redirect to "Creation myth".<br> Although "myth" may be the appropriate technical term for such stories, it is generally taken in English to mean "a traditional story that is not true" or "a widely held but false belief". Clearly that's why "myth" is not used for the Genesis version - many readers of this encyclopedia subscribe to that version to a greater or lesser degree - but that is cultural bias. On the other hand, any attempt to change the Genesis version to "Genesis creation myth" would be highly controversial. We should probably change all the "Foo creation myth" articles to "Foo creation narrative," which is neutral and appears to be the more common term in a quick Google search. "Foo creation story" would also be acceptable.<br>This would be a major change affecting dozens of articles and should probably be subject to a formal and widely-advertised proposal. I don't think we can "follow the sources" in this case, calling some of them "story" and others "myth", since the sources themselves may be subject to cultural bias. --] (]) 21:20, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:::UE doesn't hold that titles should be ''universally'' translated to English, it only holds that titles should use the form that's most common in English-language RS. (In this respect, it basically extends the principles of ] and ].) This often results in the adoption of translated titles, but also allows for moves in the other direction if sources support it: for instance, the article ] used to be titled after the magazine's translated name ''Bluestockings'', but moved to its current title by RM consensus because ''Seitō'' was more prevalent in English sourcing. ] (] • ]) 18:16, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
:*It's not Misplaced Pages's mission to correct cultural biases. That would be advocacy. --] (]) 23:22, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:{{tq|It makes no sense that anything that has a non-English name is translated in English.}} Then you should be pleased to learn your premise is mistaken: the guideline doesn't call for that (read it again: it says "should follow English-language usage", not "should translate into English"), and not everything that has a non-English name ''is'' translated to English here (though it may be transliterated): ] (not "The Mirror"), ] (not "Daily Newspaper"), ] (not "The Land"), ] (not "Don't touch my TV!"), ] (not "Love's a Bitch"), ] (not "News"), ] (not "Leghorn"), ] (not "Mechlin"), etc. Even with respect to Quebec: we have ], not "Three Rivers".
::*It is Misplaced Pages's policy to be neutral. Now if there were universal agreement in English-language sources that the Genesis creation myth is known as the Genesis creation narrative, it would be out of place to rename. However, that is not the case here. ] ≠ ] 23:43, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
:As far as I know, what's been fought for in Quebec is the primacy of French and the use of authentic French words when speaking and writing in French, not to dictate to users of English how to speak and write English when they ''are'' speaking and writing in English. In any event, this isn't ''Misplaced Pages for Quebec'', it's English Misplaced Pages for the entire world.
::**Following usage in reliable sources ''is'' being neutral, as neutral as we can be. Second-guessing usage in RS requires making non-neutral judgements. --]2] 19:26, 18 April 2014 (UTC)
:Further, French Misplaced Pages has articles titled ] and ] and ], not "United Kingdom" and "United States" and "California". Why should English Misplaced Pages follow a different approach? ] (]) 18:33, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
:::**Not sure if you're responding to my comment, but this essentially is the point I was trying to make. If reliable sources show mixed usage, then using the same neutral term for similar things per naming convention is just fine. But if one form is demonstrably preferred by reliable sources, then that would take precedence. ] ≠ ] 20:39, 18 April 2014 (UTC)
:Why would we consider what French-language newspapers say when we ARE WRITING IN ENGLISH? I don't tell you how to speak and write French, your attempt tell us how to speak and write English is monstrously offensive. --] (]) (]) 15:48, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
This probably also applies to ] (]]). ] (])
: And to the list of examples, one could add ] (not ''My Struggle''), ] (not ''Sun Circus''), ] (not ''Truth''), ] (not ''Deutschland''), and on and on. I can only agree strongly with ]: your premise is mistaken, your argumentation is baseless, and your proposal has no chance. Feel free to raise it again, though, after you have fixed the titles of the following articles at French Misplaced Pages so they all have the proper English titles: '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']''. Et passez une très bonne journée&nbsp;! ] (]) 06:08, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
:Yes, it does. I agree with you that this needs to be straightened out; the current situation reflects a systemic bias. Apparently en-wiki editors have been reluctant to call the Genesis versions "myths" even though all other such traditional/religious stories are labeled "myths'. I don't think this can be settled in a discussion among a few people on a policy talk page. Where should we take it? --] (]) 17:05, 18 April 2014 (UTC)
:] is also pertinent here, since part of the basis of the OP's idea seems to be that because the organization's official name is English, en.WP has to write it that way regardless what the preponderance of English-language sources are doing. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 10:44, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:'''Support''' I think the problem here regards NPOV and its meaning. It seems some of us (including myself) think that maintaining NPOV means that we should take information from RS's and paraphrase/word them to be fully neutral ''in terminology''. Others, such as ] believe that neutrality is maintained by strictly adhering to the wording of the RS's. Let's talk about this and get some other input from admins and come to a consensus regarding which definition of NPOV and its implementation we are going to use. ''']]''' 21:06, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
* We don't need to throw the baby out with the bathwater, but USEENGLISH is, in my view, second only to COMMONNAME in how much there's a disconnect between what people think it says and what it ''actually'' says. Misplaced Pages ''deliberately'' does not have a preferred form of English, yet, for example, I often see people in NZ-related RMs try to pull the "Māori-derived terms aren't ''really'' English" card (which coincides with the recent anti-indigenous pushback amongst white conservatives in AU/NZ politics). I think we do need a ] equivalent for the article titles policy, because even though some older people halfway across the world might still call it "Ayers Rock", the COMMONNAME for years has always been ]. ''']''' (]) 19:11, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
::We don't normally turn the neutrality question over to outsiders to decide. We should be internally neutral; if English language sources treat these equivalent myths differently due to western bias, we do not need to import that bias into wikipedia. If we find a reliable source that says one culture's or religion's myth are more realistic than another, we can discuss that, but to just count primary non-neutral sources would not be the way to go. ] (]) 21:24, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
**If I were king for a day, I would just delete the ] redirect and call it ] instead. When it's the shortcut that's causing the misunderstanding, no amount of nuance in the policy itself is likely to help. ] (]) 20:18, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Should this go to ]? ] (]) 12:37, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
::::Neutrality in article content should not be conflated with neutrality in titles. Titles are just titles. Judgements about what references to topics are or are not offensive, neutral, problematic or anything else are inherently subjective, and are made by every RS that references that topic. We rely on those RS in aggregate to make these judgements. If the preponderance of RS are using a particular reference to a topic, then we do too. We follow the lead set by RS; we are not the leader. --]2] 15:13, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
:::::] might be the way to go. NPOV is one of the Five Pillars and NPOV applies to titles just as it does to everything else. In this case, it's clear that Genesis religious narratives have been titled differently from all other religious narratives, and that smells like a violation of NPOV. IMO this came about for two reasons: the English-language "reliable sources" we are using may not be religiously neutral (if tallied by Google hits they almost certainly are not); and many en-Wiki editors, possibly a majority, come from a Christian or Jewish tradition and consciously or unconsciously think "my religion is narrative, everybody else's religion is myth." Certainly any attempt to change "Genesis creation narrative" to "Genesis creation myth" would touch off a storm of protest from en-Wiki editors. Part of the problem is that the word "myth", while neutral in scholarly use, is a highly charged/judgmental word in everyday use. I do think the NPOV page, not the titling page, is the place to sort this out. --] (]) 16:31, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
::::::In this case reliable sources show a mixture of different terms in reference to the same subject. Thus, we need one neutral term in order to be ]. In this case, we're probably seeing a manifestation of systemic bias ; if this were a different language/culturally based wiki we probably wouldn't be having this problem. If, however, you read NPOV guidelines, it clearly states that titles (Naming) fall under NPOV just like everything else on wikipedia. So yes, neutrality in titles should be conflated with neutrality in article content. ] (]) 16:39, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
I support consistency across all of these; as a Deist (and especially as an Agnostic Pandeist) my conviction is not that any of these accounts are false, but that they are all ''equally true'' and ought to be treated accordingly. I suggest dispensing with "myth," "story," and "narrative" altogether and simply going with "account." ] (]) 03:38, 22 April 2014 (UTC)


== Clarification regarding language of ] ==
:No, "account" suggests they're historical, that an eye-witness made a record.
:We've been debating this for years. The problem, of course, is that my myths are true while yours are fables. The argument over following the wording of sources that reinforce my myths is an outgrowth of that. — ] (]) 06:18, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
:: I'd be glad to have them all titled "myth" but isn't objection to that what engendered this controversy? I do not perceive "account" as being especially more authority-imbuing than "story." ] (]) 18:53, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
::: Agree. I don't see any advantage to "account", and it doesn't seem to have been used anywhere in this context that I can find. "Narrative" and "story" have the advantage of being neutral; they are terms that could apply to both fact and fiction. But again, I don't think we can decide this issue at this page; I think it needs broader participation. --] (]) 19:03, 22 April 2014 (UTC)


Hello,


I am writing to inquire about the phrasing {{Talk quote inline|...the subject area...}} in the Recognizability description. '''Does {{Talk quote inline|...subject area...}} refer to the general topic area of an article's content or specifically the subject matter of the article in question?''' I ask because I have been participating in multiple ] discussions, especially in the context of ]. In addition, how {{Talk quote inline|...subject area...}} is interpreted can affect my !vote rationale.
I have an anecdote I think it worth sharing related to this discussion. When I was in high school in the mid-1990s, I took a senior-level college preparatory English and Humanities course. The teacher was also an adjunct professor at the local university in addition to his full-time secondary education duties in the high school. He graded our papers along the same expectations as any of the university's faculty would have, and his lectures were college-style as well. As a case in point, one day he starts off the class with, "your Bible is nothing but a myth. If that shocks you, you will need to get over it because this is how academics in college or at a university will discuss the subject." Personally, I think we should follow the scholarly style with "myth", but since this is a generalist publication, using "narrative" consistently may be the best alternative. (I do not support using "story" though; it just doesn't sound as professional.) <span style="background:#006B54; padding:2px;">''']&nbsp;]'''</span> 19:51, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
:I brought it up at ]
*'''Support'''. I don't know whether it should be ''myth'' or ''narrative'' (''story'' seems too imprecise and colloquial), but I do think we need a consistent rule here. Normally, common use trumps consistency (that's why we have ] and ]), but in this case we clearly have neutrality and systemic bias to worry about as well. The principle I'd recommend: pick the neutral title (or consistently neutral ''series'' of titles) unless reliable sources lean heavily towards the non-neutral title (for example, I'd oppose titling ] "]" unless reliable sources were heavily in favor).—] (]) 23:41, 23 April 2014 (UTC)
*'''Oppose'''. We're here to report facts as laid out in reliable sources. Our mission isn't to fix perceived biases. ''']''' 01:23, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
Moved my comment from the ], since I think that's the wrong place to discuss it. My personal thoughts would be to consider the title's use in reliable sources and follow ]. If most sources refer to it as Genesis or Japanese creation narrative or story, then that tile might be appropriate, if they largely reference the Genesis or Japanese creation as a myth, then perhaps that. Personally, I'd probably try to avoid the entire myth / narrative / story from the titles if possible and just go with Genesis creation, Japanese creation, or some parenthetical alternative if it's not conflicting with other article titles. I expect using the term myth to describe currently held religious views is causing (and just asking for) contention and that one of the other terms would help keep the peace and is less judgmental (considering it a viewpoint described in Wikivoice). ] <sup>]</sup> <small><i>02:48, 24 April 2014 (UTC)</i></small>


{{Collapse top|Example for those confused about my inquiry}}
Oops, I see that we put that discussion in the wrong place. We put it at ], when it should have gone to ]. Should we try again? --] (]) 15:33, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
To illustrate my point, consider the example of the article title for Emperor ]. If {{Talk quote inline|...subject area...}} is defined to be ] broadly speaking (i.e. a general topic area for the emperor), I would argue that ''Alexander III of Russia'' meets ] '''as is''' because he does not have the name recognition of ], ], or even his son ] to go by just a '']'' or a ] without the "of Russia" qualifier.
:On second thought, I see that people mainly use that board to call attention to discussions elsewhere about NPOV. So I posted an invitation there for people to come here and weigh in. --] (]) 18:59, 24 April 2014 (UTC)


In contrast, if {{Talk quote inline|...subject area...}} is defined to be Emperor Alexander III of Russia (i.e. specifically the emperor himself), I would argue that ''Alexander III of Russia'' meets ] '''by truncating the article title to '']''''' because as someone familiar with the Russian ruler, I do not need the article title to tell me he is affiliated with Russia.
*I think that this must be decided on a case-by-case basis without reference to the validity of religious beliefs. A myth is a story, which can be told in many ways by many tellers. Cf. OED: "{{xt|A traditional story, typically involving supernatural beings or forces, which embodies and provides an explanation, aetiology, or justification for something such as the early history of a society, a religious belief or ritual, or a natural phenomenon.}}" A narrative is a specific text relating a story. Cf. OED: "{{xt|An account of a series of events, facts, etc., given in order and with the establishing of connections between them; a narration, a story, an account.}}" If the article is about the story without being tied to a version in one specific text, the word "myth" should be used in the title. If the article is about a particular textual instantiation of a myth, the word "narrative" should be used in the title. In some cases there is only one textual instantiation of the myth, such as ]. In such cases the subject of the article should determine the title, and it may be desirable to have two different articles, one on the myth and one on the narrative, if they'd be supportable by reliable sources. Of all the XXX creation myth articles we have, only ] is comparable to ] in that there's only a single textual source for it. The others are all about either straight-up myths out of oral traditions, so there are no canonical narratives or else, as in ] or ] there are multiple textual sources either recounting a single myth (Japanese) or multiple myths (Egyptian). The Sumerian creation myth article is, in my opinion, misnamed because it's about a specific text that recounts what's one of many different Sumerian creation myths both extant and presumed lost that are discussed in the literature. The articles on those other Sumerian creation myths, when they exist, are (properly) named more specifically after the actual texts in which they're found. The question of whether our choice between "narrative," "myth," or "story" in the titles of all these articles connotes an endorsement of either their truth or their falsity is a red herring.&mdash; ] (]) 19:49, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
{{Collapse bottom}}
** Does anybody really, really doubt that reliable sources can be found describing any and every theological theory of Creation as a "myth"? And though the degree to which such sources may so describe one proposition or the other may vary, if one goes back far enough one may find sources deemed reliable for their time decreeing heliocentric theory to be false, contradictory to scripture, and blasphemous. And yet who would fault modern scientists for hewing to an almost-religious certainty that heliocentrism is true? ] (]) 21:31, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
***Is this meant to be a reply to my comment?&mdash; ] (]) 21:40, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
****By that definition of narrative, literally any story, be it oral or a canonical text, is one. Therefore any culture's myth is also a narrative or a collection of narratives and could be titled accordingly. ] (]) 22:25, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
*****That's almost right but doesn't go quite far enough. Is it meant to be a reductio ad absurdum? Some cultures' myths are only transmitted orally. Then it would be possible to (a) write an article on the myth or (b) on individual oral traditions of the myth if there are more than one or (c) individual oral narrations of the myth if any of them were fixed enough to have been the subject of discussion in sources (this is a genuine possibility, see for instance Lord's ] for work on fixed oral versions of folklore) or (d) individual unique oral narrative recountings of the myth if they were preserved in audio form and met the GNG. Also note that I skipped some of the possibilities that would arise if a culture has more than one creation myth, but you can certainly generate them for yourself. If a culture's myth or myths have been written down and an individual written version is notable enough for an article then certainly there could be articles on (a) the myth in general and also (b) any of the individual narratives of the myth that meet the GNG. Then presumably we'd have articles titled XXX creation myth, XXX creation narrative 1, ... , XXX creation narrative n (or whatever names the individual narratives went by). Why is this a problem?&mdash; ] (]) 00:41, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
******I have to say that Alf's reasoning makes the most sense to me on this subject that I have seen so far. --] (]) 01:05, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
*******I agree with Alf, and was about to make this point as well. A "narrative" is a specific text, which is only one exemplification of a multi-formed myth. So, we can have ] for the actual text in that book, but something like ] for the general mythology in this family of religions.--] (]) 22:26, 28 April 2014 (UTC)


'''Please note that I am not asking this to rehash or pre-empt a move request involving ]''' <small>(In any case, I am skeptical that the Russian emperor is the ] for ''Alexander III'' because <strike>]</strike> ] had the same regnal name and number)</small>. I am asking this because I have never received an explicit clarification on this matter in the various RMs I have participated in.
@Alf, that reply was at the whole discussion, but the heliocentrism part was really directed to the notion of the Big Bang as eliciting a religious level of belief. But speaking of reliable sources, thousands of google books hits have the exact term, "Genesis creation myth," so it really ought not be at all controversial to deem it a title supported by reliable sources. Blessings!! ] (]) 04:10, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
:OK, thanks for clarifying. As you can see, I don't deny that there could be an article plausibly called "Genesis creation myth" based on reliable sources. I just deny that our ] is that article. Are you sure that all those gbook hits are talking about the narrative, or are they talking about the myth?&mdash; ] (]) 04:28, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
:: The narrative in this instance is the myth. Look at ]. There is a 'narrative' which is not a 'myth.' Or a first person account of the Battle of Bunker Hill, again a 'narrative' which is not a 'myth.' But this narrative, like a narrative of the earth being born from a giant cow, is a myth. Even if it were to be discovered to be true, it is still a myth. See the difference? ] (]) 16:51, 26 April 2014 (UTC)
:::No, you're wrong. This narrative is a distinct and notable narrative of the myth. It is not the myth itself. There are earlier narratives of (parts of) the myth, J and P, which have their own articles. There are later narratives of the myth based on this narrative. Probably every translation of the Genesis narrative is a new narrative of the myth. Some are undoubtedly notable enough to support articles, e.g. the Septuagint version, Jerome's vulgate, the Vulgata Clementina version, Luther's translation, the KJ translation, Douay-Rheims, other languages. I have no doubt that the narratives in all of these versions could support articles. Even the wikipedia article we're talking about is a distinct narrative of the myth, although not notable (yet?). Arguendo, assume that the life of Jesus is a myth. Then we have at least four narratives of that myth, each with its own article. See the difference?&mdash; ] (]) 18:15, 26 April 2014 (UTC)
:::: Ah, what you have revealed is a category error, which has become the basis for my vote to support moving this title -- a ] is a kind of thing, and everything which is one is a something-"Creation myth" whether it is a narrative or other form. This is a whole concept, like "hot dog" being different from either a "hot" or a "dog" -- if one had a recipe for a certain kind of hot dog, one could not correctly title it a "hot recipe," instead of a "hot dog recipe." For that is what titling the narrative of a certain Creation myth a "Creation ____ narrative" instead of a " Creation myth narrative" does!! ] (]) 05:22, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
:::::You're quite confused. See my comment on the other page. You're right that "hot dog" is a kind of a thing. In fact, "hot dog" is a single word in the English language. That's not the case with "Creation myth." "Creation myth" is not a single word, it's a determiner+noun construction.&mdash; ] (]) 05:47, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
::::::Alf, you say that the Vulgate and KJ are different narratives of the same myth. But our article is not about a specific version, so either it is the myth, or we need to remove the English examples and narrow the focus to the Hebrew narrative, in which case "Hebrew narrative of the Genesis creation myth" might be a better title. — ] (]) 01:55, 29 April 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Well, I actually said "probably." When we write articles on books in non-English languages we often quote some of the text translated into English. There's nothing different here. Articles on specific translations are probably all doable, but the fact that they're doable isn't an argument against having an article on the narrative free from reference to the language its in. Our article is about the canonical Hebrew text and some of the issues that arise in general in translating it into English. It makes quite specific reference to the Hebrew text. Since the Hebrew text is the original it would be silly to qualify it as you propose. It would be like moving ] to ].&mdash; ] (]) 02:37, 29 April 2014 (UTC)
I'd go with myth, since it is more specific. Misplaced Pages has taken the position that Creationism is pseudoscience, so the work of finding sources is done. <small><span class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 16:07, 26 April 2014 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thank you,
:Misplaced Pages neutrality means presenting views in reliable sources according to their prevalence. It does not mean correcting the bias that exists in reliable sources. Since rs do not normally call the Genesis story a myth, neither should be.
:If there is a bias in rs, I would say it is that the term myth is used to denigrate non-Abrahamic creation stories. That happened historically because Western scholars could not see heathen religions as having equal validity.
:] (]) 19:22, 27 April 2014 (UTC)


'''''] (]) (])''''' 19:41, 1 November 2024 (UTC), last edited 14:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::And that is ultimately the issue here. It's not so much which word we use, but the unequal application of words based on our own (or our references') biases. This is no different than calling 'primitive' nations 'tribes', their kings 'chiefs', their languages 'dialects', and their religions 'fetishes' – there's nothing wrong with using those words for actual tribes, chiefs, dialects, and fetishes, the problem is in unequal application. This is to be avoided per ]. — ] (]) 02:04, 29 April 2014 (UTC)


:N
:::Google books and Google scholar (both of which have problems if not used carefully, show a far number of this for "creation myths" then "creation narratives". In addition, myth and narrative are not synonymous. In some cases there is a clear narrative - there is a narrative in Genesis and there is also a Genesis creation myth, but for many myths there is no single narrative, story, account, etc. The fact that Abrahamic theologians write about Christian and Jewish myths is often ignored in these debates which get turned into "If you use myth you are anti-religious" arguments. Are we really not going to have articles that use the term "Greek mythology"? :], we have articles on ] and ] - what do you want to call them? ] (]) 15:44, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
:Virtually nobody remembers Alexander the Great's regnal number, so he is obviously not a candidate for the primary topic.--] (]) (]) 21:16, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
:There are various Jewish and Christian ]s that have the Creation as their setting (The idea that Satan/Lucifer was a "Fallen Angel" for example). Midrashs are stories that do ''not'' appear in the bible... and I don't think anyone would object to classifying ''them'' as "Myths". The question is whether that word should be used to describe the scriptural account told in Genesis? In the interest of NPOV, I would avoid it. The fact is, The word myth is seen as a pejorative... it is almost always used in the context of discussing the stories of religions ''other'' than one's own. Greek Mythology is called "mythology" because it isn't part of the Judeo-Christian religious belief. ] (]) 16:34, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
:True, "narrative" and "mythology" are not synonymous. However, "narrative" and "myth", if used in reference to a specific myth, can be. Narrative is defined as "a spoken or written account of connected events; a story." Myth is defined as "a traditional story, especially one concerning the early history of a people or explaining some natural or social phenomenon, and typically involving supernatural beings or events." The two definitions overlap significantly; every myth is also a narrative. Therefore, by calling a myth a narrative, we are simply using a vaguer definition which does not imply falseness. We need to consistently call all creation myths narratives, or consistently call them all myths, or we are treating them partially and with bias. ] (])
*'''Support''' standardising the titles. "Myth" would be my preference, as it seems to be the term favoured in scholarly usage, but if that is too controversial "narrative" would be an acceptable alternative. Seeking consistency in article titles is not a case of impermissible activism on Misplaced Pages's part: it is supported by ]. ] (]) 22:30, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
*'''Support'''. Specifically, I support "myth", because they '''are''' creation myths. There's no reason to use euphemisms. To insinuate that Christian mythology is not mythology is plain silly, and such favoritism does our readers a disservice. ] (]) 07:16, 4 May 2014 (UTC)


::Thank you for noting this. I admit that I thought about that when I was writing my query, but I also believed that Alexander the Great could still be the primary topic for ''Alexander III'' on technical grounds. I probably should have used ], who ''is'' commonly known by that regnal number, to illustrate my point. '''''] (]) (])''''' 14:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::OK... Let's analyze this with our WP:Article titles policy firmly in mind...
:::Taking the revised version of the OP's scenario, of "Alexander III" in particular: in English-language sources, the Scottish monarch still only has only a bit more than half as much RS coverage as the Russian one . Whether 12K sources for the Scot and 20K for the Russian firmly establishes the latter as the ] might be open to some disputation (which would not be the case if it were something like 3K to 175K split). But the Scottish one clearly is not primary, and he would probably be the leading contender against the Russian by a wide margin. To answer the OP's more general question, "subject area" in this sense means heads of state and comparable figures (such as Popes and a few other people usually known by "Foobar IV" regnal-style numbering, perhaps inclusive of major non-states like duchies in some cases). It doesn't mean anything narrower that's dependent on the specific article content and context (like being Russian or from a particular era). <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 10:56, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
::First, we need to determine whether the title is a NAME title or a DESCRIPTIVE title. If it is a NAME title, we then have the follow up question of whether WP:COMMONNAME applies. To answer the question we need to determine whether reliable sources use the exact string of words "Genesis Creation Myth" as a ''name'' for the story. Simply ''referring'' to Genesis as being a myth is not enough. (This is similar to how we deal with article titles about mass killings. While we can describe the event as being a massacre in the body of the text, we don't include the potentially POV word "massacre" in the title unless the event is routinely NAMED "The X Massacre" in sources).
::Looking at the sources... there certainly are reliable sources that ''refer'' to Genesis as being a myth... but there are few (if any) that use the string "Genesis Creation Myth" as a NAME for that story. Therefor, I must conclude that our article title is a DESCRIPTIVE one. (and the follow up question of WP:COMMONNAME is moot).
::Since this is a DECRIPTIVE title, it does not really matter whether Genesis is or is not a myth. The issue becomes whether including the word "myth" in the title is WP:NEUTRAL or not. That is a more complex issue. Certainly using that word will be offensive to fundamentalist Christians who believe in the literal truth of the story. It will also give pause (if not offend) those who see Genesis in a more allegorical light (believing that it contains spiritual/allegorical ''truth'', if not factually "accuracy"). Others, of course, will have no problem with the use of the word. Being dispassionate, and considering all the differing viewpoints, I have to conclude that the word is NOT a neutral one.
::That leads to yet a further question... is there some other word that ''is'' neutral? Story? Narrative? Account? I think they are ''all'' problematic. Someone will object no matter which word we use to describe Genesis.
::So... let's think outside the box... can we come up with a title that will NEUTRALLY describe the topic. One that will not use any of the potentially POV words. I think we can... and (as an initial offering) would suggest something along the lines of ]. ] (]) 13:58, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
::The issue isn't with that article, but with calling it "narrative" and virtually everything else "myth" (Genesis certainly is a myth in the academic sense of the word). If myth isn't neutral in reference to Genesis, how can we use it to describe Shinto? Or Ainu traditions? ] (]) 16:13, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
::::My opinion... describing Shinto or Ainu traditions as "Myths" is equally Non-Neutral... and so we probably ''shouldn't'' use "myth" in such contexts ''either''. I would go with ], ]... (or generically: ]. Such a title would be completely neutral, and completely accurate. ] (]) 00:20, 5 May 2014 (UTC)


== Request for comment on the relationship between ] and ] ==
::: I agree with Rwennonah. Myth is perfectly neutral. Abrahamic religions are not a special case merely because they are popular in the West. Academic sources refer to these stories as creation myths, and these are the kinds of reliable sources that I would trust. ] (]) 21:13, 4 May 2014 (UTC)


{{archive top|status=no|result=
== Redirection of titles missing periods ==
There is consensus that '''] does not take precedence over ]'''. Editors should continue to balance all relevant guidelines and policies when determining article titles, without giving inherent precedence to either section.


Most participants agreed that both sections are integral parts of the ] policy and should be balanced and considered equally when determining titles in a ] discussion, on a case-by-case basis using the context of an article. Editors argued that neither section should override the other universally; instead, contributors should weigh all relevant factors alongside the policy's text. Some editors also suggested that ] and relevant sections in the ] were an additional important consideration in RM discussions.
Please see ] (version of ). <br>
—] (]) 16:49, 21 April 2014 (UTC) and 18:46, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
*Seems a very good reason to create a redirect without the period for every article URL ending in a period. --] (]) 12:24, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
** A bot could do this quickly and automatically. I have ]. Cheers! ] ] 20:01, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
*** I think it would be worth making a note of this somewhere in the guideline. — ] <span style="color:#900">•</span> ] 12:28, 30 April 2014 (UTC)


The minority of contributors supporting the primacy of ] communicated that the strong and direct language in the section (e.g. "do" / "must" rather than "should do" / "can do") established precedence. However, opposing participants argued that policies are not set in stone, and that disagreements over their interpretation should be resolved through consensus-based discussions rather than strictly following the exact wording of the policy (] and ]). Furthermore, while editors supporting primacy also contended that enforcing precedence would prevent potential conflicts and maintain internal consistency within the policy, opposing editors rebutted that such disharmony and inconsistency was not widespread under the status quo.
== Visually impaired users and disambiguation ==


] (]) 06:11, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Another editor has recently commented ''One consideration that probably doesn't get enough air time is that sight-impaired people will not read these articles, but will have them read to them.'' This has implications both for running text style and of course for article titles, and I think it's an excellent point.
{{nac}}

}}
But ] (shortcut WP:DIFFCAPS) currently reads in part ''Titles of distinct articles may differ only in their detail. Many such differences involve capitalization, separation or non-separation of components, or pluralization: MAVEN and Maven; Red Meat and Red meat; Sea-Monkeys and SeaMonkey.'' Many of these differences would not generally appear in spoken English. '']'' and '']'' is particularly difficult, and this is relevant to other current discussions regarding capitalisation.

Should article titles be disambiguated both in written and spoken English? This is a new idea to me, but I think it's a good one. Other comments? ] (]) 06:29, 27 April 2014 (UTC)


For any proposed article title determined by the application of ] the proposed title should nonetheless comply with ] (ie ] has primacy over ]). ] (]) 00:03, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
* '''Support''' We can't always ensure that all content is equally accessible (diagrams such as ]s are important in biological articles, for example) but I agree that we can and should ensure that so far as possible article titles are not ambiguous in spoken English. ] (]) 08:11, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*:Wouldn't this require us to append explicit disambiguation to the title of ''any'' article whose subject shares its name with another notable entity (regardless of whether one is the ])?<br />In many instances, we don't even have unspoken formatting differences on which to rely. For example, the ] article is about the Prime Minister of the UK, but ] share that name. To achieve the change suggested, wouldn't we need to move the article to ] or similar? If not, why not? The only material difference that I see is the ''complete'' lack of titular disambiguation (as opposed to that which is written but not pronounced).<br />Isn't this why we have hatnotes (for the benefit of all users, irrespective of visual acuity)? Both ] and ] contain them, so what problem actually exists?<br />Has anyone bothered to ask one or more users of screen readers to comment on the current setup and experiences therewith, or have we jumped straight to voting? —] 09:19, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*::It probably doesn't do any harm to ''jump straight to voting'', nobody is likely to close this as a poll I hope (although I've been proved spectacularly wrong on this before). But it certainly wasn't what I had in mind for this section. Thanks for your contributions, and for the invitation to Graham87, that's more the sort of thing I was after. ] (]) 20:01, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*:::Indeed, I regard this discussion as worthwhile. And yes, I certainly hope that no one would close it as a poll. I'm sure that we all "support" making the site accessible to people with visual impairments, but it's important to understand what problems actually exist before we attempt to solve them. —] 21:19, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*::::Well put. I only wish editors would apply that last point to all discussions! ] (]) 02:55, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
*'''Note:''' I've invited ] (a screen reader user and ] participant) to comment. —] 09:40, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*I think the current setup is fine as is. While it's true that screen readers don't distinguish between capital and lower-case letters, the hatnotes are there to help the readers if they're in the wrong place. ''']'''<font color="green">]</font> 10:08, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*:Thanks, exactly the sort of feedback I was after. But it raises a point which has also been raised elsewhere: Should we avoid such disambiguation in running text? There are no hatnotes to help there. And, if we avoid relying on these features to disambiguate in running text, should we then also avoid them in article titles, for consistency? That first question mainly for Graham (but other comments welcome of course), the second for anyone. ] (]) 20:21, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*::We certainly should avoid relying solely on differences in capitalization/punctuation/type to distinguish concepts in running text. Unlike article titles, no parenthetical disambiguation (or hatnote) is required to accomplish this. To touch on the subject of birds (in the hope that this doesn't ruffle any feathers), most readers (apart from those familiar with specialist conventions) won't realize that "]" refers to a specific species and "common blackbird" refers to any blackbird species that's common. The solution is to explicitly describe the former (irrespective of whether its name is capitalized) as a specific species and avoid using the phrase "common blackbird" to describe another species. (Instead, we can state that it's "a common species of blackbird" or "a species of blackbird common in ", etc.)<br />Likewise, we shouldn't state that someone is "a fan of ]" or "a fan of '']''" without elaboration. We should explicitly indicate that he/she enjoys "eating ]" or "reading the comic strip '']''".<br />This obviously isn't applicable to article titles, so no additional consistency is called for. We just need to make sure that an article's prose is clear and all appropriate hatnotes are in place. —] 21:19, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*:::Again, very well put I think. ] (]) 03:01, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''': what you're suggesting is that we not only meet the technical limitations of Misplaced Pages by disambiguating topics that would otherwise have the same title, but also go ahead and qualify unambiguous titles if they are ambiguous in spoken English. This includes the minor differences in ] and ] as well as homophones like ] and ]. I do not think this is a good idea; screen-reading software has the ability to spell out words when needed, and readers and listeners have the ability to parse ambiguity by context, so they don't share Misplaced Pages's technical limitation. -- ] (]) 22:00, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*:Please don't personalise, particularly when you have the wrong person! Good points apart from that. ] (]) 03:01, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
*::Please don't personalize, particularly when you have the wrong person! -- ] (]) 10:25, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
*'''identify a clear problem first''' I assume mediawiki or the foundation has someone responsible for accessibility issues. They likely have a way of reaching out to wikipedians or readers who use other ways of getting our content. We need to work through them and have them identify a specific problem, and then if they aren't able to fix it with software, they should come here and say 'hey, could we change some titles such that...' In the absence of a clearly identified problem we should not start working out solutions.--] (]) 23:34, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
*:Definitely agree with that last sentence, see above. ] (]) 03:01, 28 April 2014 (UTC)


For simplicity, comments can be made as a ''Yes'' or ''No'' to the RfC proposition.
== I want to create a new article, but... ==
{{discussiontop}}
*] do not yet have an article for their eponymous album, but ] have an article for ''their'' eponymous album. Thus, I cannot name the new article ], so what should I name it? '''<span style="color:orange;">Erpert</span>''' <small><sup><span style="color:yellow;">]</span></sup></small> 04:41, 29 April 2014 (UTC)
**Never mind; I figured it out. '''<span style="color:orange;">Erpert</span>''' <small><sup><span style="color:yellow;">]</span></sup></small> 04:43, 29 April 2014 (UTC)
{{discussionbottom}}


===Background===
== RfC: '''Revised''' proposed rewording for instructions for disambiguation at the WikiProject Comics Manual of Style ==


At ], it is stated: {{tq|The following points are used in deciding on questions ''not covered'' by the five principles; consistency on these helps avoid duplicate articles}} .
A revised Request for Comment has been made regarding the policy compliance of title disambiguation for articles under WikiProject Comics. Please join the discussion ] (original ]). ]&nbsp;(]) 23:49, 30 April 2014 (UTC)


The meaning of any particular part of a policy should be construed within the fuller context and not in isolation. The question considers whether the two sections exist in harmony with each other or whether the application of any of the five criteria can be construed to over-ride any of the matters detailed in ].
==NATURALDIS and company names==
You may be interested in a discussion at ] on whether having company names as part of article titles constitute advertising. -- ] (]) 10:25, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
:The question of "advertizing" is a bit of a red herring, in my opinion... WP:COMMONNAME is what should govern the debate. Some of our articles on spacecraft include the company name (Example: ])... others don't (example: ]). It really depends on whether the ''sources'' use the company name when referring to the craft. ] (]) 12:33, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
::That's {{em|not}} the only consideration, though. Unless Boeing's name is prepended almost always when referring to that vehicle, there's really no reason to have Boeing in that article title when ] would work. Something even shorter than that might; how many X-20s are there? How many Dyna-Soars? People in favor of one name or another can sometimes be good a digging up sources that favor their version of a name and ignoring sources that don't, on the hopes that no one will bother to do counter-research to contradict them. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 20:36, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
:::Sorry, concision is a factor, but it does not trump commonname. The relevant standard here is ''not'' "almost always". The relevant standard is "most common". If the longer name is used more commonly than shorter name, in reliable sources, then we go with the longer name. Only if it's a wash per Common Name do we apply the {{User:Born2cycle/CR}} to settle the issue. --]2] 22:14, 1 May 2014 (UTC)
:::The 'most commonly usedname' for virtually all aircraft is "Manufacturer+Designation (when appropriate)+Name (when appropriate)". This is one of the reasons M-D-N was determined by ] to be the preferred naming format reccomended by the project for aircraft article titles (the other being consistency, as before there were aircraft ''without'' names using naming formats like ], while those with were at formats like ]). And regardless, the contention that the company name is somehow "advertising" is the ] of one solitary editor who refuses to ]. - ] <sub><font color="maroon">]</font></sub> 00:56, 2 May 2014 (UTC)
::::I'm not citing B2C's in-progress and frequently criticized essay at all (though I need to read it again and see if it's improved in response to the criticisms). We've had the principle to prefer a short name over a long one when both will suffice for {{em|years}}; there's nothing new about the idea at all. WP:COMMONNAME does not exist in a vacuum, and is always balanced against other factors when they arise, verbosity being one of them.<p>Avoiding the unnecessary addition of manufacturer/publisher names to article titles is not at all just one random editor's tendentious fight; it's normal WP practice. Very, very few articles are at such names, for two reasons: It's rarely helpful, and it looks like (and encourages) use of WP for promotional activities. I doubt I have to observe, especially at this page, that the number of wikiprojects making "we do it this way, and you can just go soak your head if you disagree" pronouncements, as if they were their own sovereign entities, is getting really, really tiresome. While it's quite likely that article names that begin with the manufacturer name followed by more details are {{em|sometimes}}, maybe even {{em|often}}, useful for aircraft (among some other things), it's certainly not {{em|always}} helpful. No wikiproject has a special right to force all other editors to use a naming scheme some people at the wikiproject prefer; this is a matter of clear policy, under ], ] {{em|and}} ] (] is also frequently implicated in these "do it our way" campaigns, based usually upon some specialist usage that has jack to do with encyclopedia writing; see ] for a better-accepted essay covering that problem in detail). <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 01:39, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::SMC, this isn't a ] issue... it is not a case of one WikiProject making up its own rules contrary to "standard WP practice". In fact, when it comes to vehicle related topic areas, including the manufacturers name seems to '''be''' the standard practice. For example, Look through ] and ]... the inclusion of the manufacturer's name is actually ''routine''.
:::::What is making the Lynx article problematic is that it isn't a ''aircraft''... it is a ''spacecraft''... and most of our articles on other spacecraft have ''not'' included the manufacturers name. However, ''that'' omission is due to the fact that, until recently, there hasn't really ''been'' a single manufacturer for spacecraft. Until recently, spacecraft were built by ''governments'', not corporations. That is beginning to change. ] (]) 14:34, 4 May 2014 (UTC)


This RfC does not propose a change to the wording of this policy nor does it preclude a change. ] (]) 00:16, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
== Is local consensus at MOS:COMIC overriding policy? ==
{{FYI|There's a related but not completely overlapping active RfC about this at ]. Some may want to centralize discussion there.}}
] at ] states:


'''Note:''' Just as there are five principles listed at ], there are eleven matters (sections) to ]. The proposition deals with the relationship between ] (as a whole) and ] (as a whole). 08:25, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
::{{green|the agreed general disambiguation phrase used for articles related to comics, including creators, publications, and content, is "(comics)"&nbsp;... In general, when naming an article, use the name itself&nbsp;... unless that leads to ambiguity, in which case, follow with "(comics)" (e.g. ]).}}


'''Intent''' The intent of this RfC is to determine what the policy is actually telling us as written (how it should reasonably be construed) as opposed to what editors ''think'' the policy should be telling us. If there is a disjunction between the two, then an amendment to the policy is indicated but that would be another issue.
This is being interpreted this to mean that all articles under the {{tld|WikiProject Comics}} banner, regardless of scope, should use (comics) by default when disambiguation is needed.


Pinging editors that have already commented: {{U|WhatamIdoing}}, {{U|Thryduulf}}, {{U|Voorts}}, {{U|SnowFire}}, {{U|Adumbrativus}}, {{U|Extraordinary Writ}}, {{U|Novem Linguae}} and {{U|Mdewman6}}. ] (]) 10:35, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
* The Requested Move for media franchise character Wolverine from ] to ] was: "]"
* ""
* ""
* ""
It is also stated that articles for characters that began life in comics must focus on the comics aspect of that character, segregating appearances in other media to separate articles:


===Comments===
* "] or ]]"


*'''Yes''' (as proposer) The wording at the intro to TITLEFORMAT states the considerations detailed therein are {{tq|''not covered'' by the five principles}} - matters raised therein fall outside the scope of CRITERIA. The matters identified at TITLEFORMAT mainly exist for technical reasons that ''should not'' be over-ridden (noting that it is rare to use ''must not'' on WP). Reading the subject guidance in the full context of this policy, the proposition represents both the ''spirit and intent'' and the letter of the policy. Accepting the proposition asserts a harmony between the two individual sections. Rejecting the proposition creates tension and disharmony within the policy. That would assume that the drafters of the policy lacked the perception to see such a conflict of ideas and/or, that such a conflict should exist. By ] (or at least its corollary) the reasonable (simplest) view is that the intention is one of harmony between the two sections. ] (]) 00:46, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
Is this within the boundaries of what a WikiProject can mandate? ]&nbsp;(]) 22:10, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
:'''PS''' Many of the eleven matters identified at TITLEFORMAT use unambiguous emphatic language such as ''do not'' or ''use'' rather than ''should use''. Such language serves to tell us that these matters are not optional. They are definitely not informing us on {{tq|how to balance the five criteria}}. These are things that a proposed title ''cannot violate''. Such language quite clearly establishes the relationship with CRITERIA and the primacy of the matters at TITLEFORMAT collectively. ] (]) 08:51, 18 November 2024 (UTC)


*For context, this stems from ] (about ]), where I was asked as closer to disregard !votes that invoked consistency. I declined to do so since I feel consistency is a policy consideration (]; ]) that editors are allowed to balance against other factors, but if editors think that style guidelines like ] should always take precedence, I'm happy to be recalibrated. ] (]) 01:08, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
:I don't see what the conflict or override is, or what you mean by mandate. WikiProjects do normally work on title guidelines to make their titles more consistently structured, so unless you see a conflict with a more widely agree titling guideline, it's probably OK. ] (]) 22:20, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
*:Just to be clear, it is not that ] takes precedence (at least not directly). It is that ] is part of ]. The weight given to ] comes from within ]. ] (]) 01:26, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
::{{ping|Dicklyon}} It's not a consistency issue—WikiProject Comics is saying that articles listed until multiple Projects (say, {{tld|WikiProject Comics}} ''and'' {{tld|WikiProject Fictional characters}}) should use (comics) as disambiguation by default, and is using that as a move rationale for articles disambiguated with (character) or something else. ]&nbsp;(]) 22:43, 3 May 2014 (UTC)
*'''No''' ] should not have primacy over ]; both are part of the ] policy and should carry equal weight. ] addresses issues not directly addressed by ], in other words, it informs how to balance and invoke the 5 criteria, but is not something that the criteria can 'violate' or not. In the case of that RM, the fundamental question is whether "battle" is part of the proper noun or not, which essentially is a ] question- how do ] normally write it. Thus, we have ] and, more specifically, ], which are ], which are specific invocations of a combination of ] and ], which are both ]. I don't think ] arguments should be completely discounted, but it's up to the RM participants and the closer to determine how much weight they carry. ] states consistency should be the goal {{tq|to the extent it is practical}} and ] (an essay) discusses consistency arguments {{tq|when other considerations are equal}} so it seems clear consistency should not be ''the only'' consideration. Personally, I think most battles significant enough to be known as "battle of x", "battle" is clearly part of the proper noun (the event usually being more important than where it occurred), but we must follow reliable sources. ] (]) 03:06, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No'''. Both policy sections include various factors that are used to determine an appropriate title on a case by case basis. In an RM discussion, any relevant factors should be balanced and weighed against one another to reach consensus. I don't see evidence of disharmony or major inconsistency requiring a massive change to policy. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. ] (]/]) 22:29, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
*:This RfC does not propose a change to policy. It is a question of how the ''spirit and intent'' and the letter of two different parts of the policy, as they exist, should be ''reasonably'' construed. ] (]) 03:37, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
*::That's splitting hairs. If there's only one way of reasonaly construing a policy, then that construction becomes the policy. ] (]/]) 14:32, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::Reading CRITERIA and the supporting sections addressing the five principles (within the full context of the policy), it is essentially telling us that a proposed title is determined by weighing each principle and that each principle need not be given equal weight in a particular case. However, TITLEFORMAT tells us that the matters therein are {{tq|questions ''not covered'' by the five principles}} - ie they are outside the scope of CRITERIA and the five principles. The matters at TITLEFORMAT are clearly quite separate from CRITERIA. The eleven matters at TITLEFORMAT tell us to do a certain thing, to not do a certain thing or that certain things might be done in narrowly construed circumstances. Compared with CRITERIA (and the five sections that explain the individual principles) TITLEFORMAT uses emphatic language. Reading the individual sections in the fuller context of the whole policy, TITLEFORMAT is essentially telling us to discard or modify a proposed title if it does not conform to any of the eleven matters therein. At no point does it suggest that any of the five principles might {{tq|cover}} any of the matters at TITLEFORMAT. Consequently, it is not reasonable to posture that any of the five principles, either individually or in combination, might over-ride or supplant any of the matters at TITLEFORMAT - especially those which are made emphatically without exception.
*:::Yes, there ''is'' only one way that a rule, law or policy ''should'' be ''reasonably'' construed if it is robustly constructed - eg without ambiguity. But that is not always the case. Consequently, in the real world, rules and laws are often tested to determine how they should be ''reasonably'' construed. I make a ''reasoned'' case that the letter of the policy is that, matters at TITLEFORMAT have primacy over CRITERIA. In consequence there is harmony between the two sections internally and a harmony between ] and other associated P&G. The internal and external harmony evidences that construing the relationship between the two sections this way represents not only the letter of the policy but the ''spirit and intent'' of the policy. Asserting otherwise creates tension, ambiguity, inconsistency and disharmony between the two sections and related P&G where none exists otherwise. Is there a ''reasoned'' argument that the alternative accurately represents the letter of the policy and the ''spirit and intent'' or is it just an opinion that ''I don't like it'', then it should be made.
*:::Yes, {{tq|n an RM discussion, any relevant factors should be balanced and weighed against one another}}. However, arguing an internal contradiction within a policy where none ''reasonably'' exists would be illogical and flatly contradict the policy. Accordingly, it should be ]. ] (]) 02:07, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines are not statutes. They are not written by a single body at a single point of time; there's no legislative drafters or style guide; and the overriding concerns are not precision, consistency, or rule of law. Rather, they are written by several editors—many with opposing viewpoints—over the course of decades according to a process that values ], with the recognition that ] is an overriding principle. Your interpretation of AT as written might be correct, but it's beside the point. In current practice, RM discussions generally involve editors making arguments based on COMMONNAME, CRITERIA, TITLEFORMAT, or any of the various naming conventions, and then weighing between those arguments. One discussion might conclude with a consensus that consistency is more important than concision, while another might result in using a common name instead of a precise title. ] (]/]) 02:23, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::::{{tq|If there's only one way of reasonaly construing a policy, then that construction becomes the policy.}} We can only construe a policy base on what is written. The purpose and intent of this RfC is to determine how the relationship between CRITERIA and TITLEFORMAT should be construed ''based on what is written within the fuller context of the policy''. This is exactly the ''point''. Proposing a title (be it the initial title or at an RM) is about balancing the five criteria for any particular case. That is what the policy is telling us and it is not disputed. But this is not the question posed by the RfC nor the ''point'' of the RfC. If the policy is telling us to comply with TITLEFORMAT, then that is what we do too. The intent of the RfC is not to determine what editors think the policy should say but what it actually says. If it doesn't say what the community think it should say, then it is ""broke" and should be fixed. However, that would be another matter since it is not the intent of this RfC to change the policy. Furthermore, IAR is not a ''get out of jail free'' card to be exercised whenever one just doesn't like the rules. ] (]) 10:06, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::::I'm a lawyer. I love getting in the weeds and arguing about the meaning of the law. But that's not how Misplaced Pages interprets or creates rules. Editors operate based on consensus, not ] of P&Gs. Please review ] and ]. ] (]/]) 14:10, 20 November 2024 (UTC)


*'''No'''. Voorts puts it well. Both sections contain factors that need to be considered in the context of an individual discussion and neither can be correctly stated as stronger than the other in all cases. ] (]) 23:02, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
:Normally I'm the first to jump on the collective a of wikiprojects getting ]y, but I'm not sure I see a real problem here. Characters and whatnot that start as comics-based are almost invariably most notable still in that context, no matter how popular movies or TV shows about them are. Take the character Rick Grimes from ''The Walking Dead''. It's a different but similar and same-named character in the comics vs. the TV series, so if the characters need articles apart from the comic series and TV series (doubtful) it would not make sense to have the TV character covered in the comics article or vice versa. I.e., separate articles with their own disambiguation makes sense. I don't personally agree with using " (comics)" as a disambiguator, but I've given up on that (it's more objectionable with something like " (baseball)", e.g. ], since Mike Smith is not a baseball and is not a brand of baseballs. The wretchedness of that sort of parenthetical disambiguation (vs., say, " (baseball player)") isn't as overwhelming with " (comics)". Anyway, '''Is there a specific example where the comics project is doing something objectionable?'''? A general objection to a wikiproject having a fair amount of influence over the shape of articles they consider in-scope doesn't seem sustainable here. What's the particular bad thing happening, and where? Demonstrate the problem. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 01:28, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
*This RFC could use some examples placed prominently towards the top somewhere. I read it twice and do not understand it. If I spent another 5 minutes reading the linked policies I could probably puzzle it out, but including that information here would be helpful. –] <small>(])</small> 23:35, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
:: It's come up a couple of times: the "Wolverine" article was moved to ] per ], and then moved back to ] per ], where objections that "Fictional characters use "(character)"" and that "WP:LOCALCONSENSUS used by comic articles should be changed to the standardized version used by fictional characters" were trumped with "The standard is to have (comics) in the title, not (character)" per MOS:COMIC (I wasn't involved in either of these discussions). There's an ongoing debate over at ] as well. The issue isn't over (character) ''per se'' (all parites have rejected (character) in the Hydra discussion), but it has been acknowledged that (character) is the standard disambiguator for characters from ''other'' media (books, film, TV, plays)—everywhere but WP:CMC.
*:{{U|Novem Linguae}}, it is a question of whether CRITERIA (or any particular principle therein) would over-ride any (one or more) of the eleven matters at TITLEFORMAT, noting that for many of these matters the language used is emphatic rather than optional. My response to Voorts might better explain the issue. I will give some examples if this helps. Some of these are related/analogous to article title discussions that have occurred.
:: <small>(As for the use of "comics", the word is an ] that refers to the medium. You can't refer to "a comics", but you can refer to the "comics medium" or "an expert in comics").</small> ]&nbsp;(]) 02:25, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
*::Would a proposed title that uses title case over-ride LOWERCASE on the basis that article titles using title case are more RECOGNISABLE or more NATURAL than article titles written in sentence case?
:::Worth looking into, <del>but I decline to get into this any further here, since there's already an RfC ongoing about this</del> <ins>but it might be better to let the ongoing RfC conclude first, so discussion isn't fragmented.<ins><span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 02:37, 4 May 2014 (UTC) {{small|Updated: 06:48, 5 May 2014 (UTC)}}
*::Would a proposed title of ''#tag'' over-ride ] on the basis of recognisability/COMMONNAME?
*::Would a series of sub-articles on a topic in a format similar to "Azerbaijan/Transport" (though using some character other than "/") on the basis of CONSISTENT, NATURAL or CONCISE over-ride ]?
*::Would one have a title "The Department of Foo", over-riding ] on the basis of CONSISTENT and COMMONNAME (we always see "the Department of Foo" in sources) or "Wild horses", using a similar argument to over-ride ].
*::Would we have "X Plate" for the names of individual tectonic plates citing CONSISTENT because all WP articles use "X Plate" over-riding LOWERCASE even though none of the individual plate names are consistently capped in sources. Or do we change all of these to lowercase on the basis of CONSISTENT because the majority of cases are consistently not capitalised in sources?
*::Would CONCISE over-ride ] to use "¿" for an article about the inverted question mark?
*:] (]) 02:19, 20 November 2024 (UTC)


*'''No''', Voorts is correct. ] (]) 02:37, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
===Redundant with RfC?===
*'''No'''. If any one guideline should have precedence, it's ], which is the titling equivalent of how Misplaced Pages handles everything else (e.g. ] for when sources disagree on more factual matters). Perhaps ], too (the titling equivalent of ]). (Not seriously mentioning these as counterproposals, just an "IMO" on priority.)
{{Resolved}}
** Part 2: I don't want to sidetrack, but I also disagree that this is even applicable to the sample RM that caused this (which I did not participate in). Suppose an editor performs a, for purpose of discussion, indisputably incorrect ngrams analysis. They screwed something up, made a typo, who knows. But the results of that faulty ngram analysis indicate some rule in TITLEFORMAT should predominate. But... it doesn't matter, because ], so the would-be TITLEFORMAT guidance doesn't even really apply. Okay, the case of a clear error isn't common, but what's more common is a ''contested'' ngram analysis. Cinderella said in that RM and in others that ngrams can overstate the rate of capitalization, but a lot of people disagree and believe that ngrams can understate the rate of capitalization by mixing in normal uses of the term. Which side is "right" isn't important here, but the point is, if the raw evidence is contested, a closer shouldn't just close "because (some policy in TITLEFORMAT) says so". There's really ''two'' claims afoot here, one of raw evidence and one of how to apply policy, and the first is often harder to parse! I've seen RMs close on arguments that are (IMO) inarguably at variance with the facts on the ground, and I'm sure that others think the same in reverse of me. Point is, it's not even clear that this proposed change does what it's implied to do, and if it does it would lead to absurdities like my example before of a faulty analysis somehow prevailing because it invoked the "right" policy on the wrong grounds. ] (]) 00:00, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
* '''There's no reason to fork the discussion. There's an active poll/RfC at ] about this.''' <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 02:37, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
**:{{U|SnowFire}}, firstly, there is no change to WP:AT proposed here at all. The question is about how the existing letter and ''spirit and intent'' of the relationship between CRITERIA and TITLEFORMAT should be (correctly) construed. Secondly, while the discussion with Extraordinary Writ may have led to this RfC (one followed the other), the RM being discussed there was not the only matter leading to this RM. In that RM it was argued that the CONSISTENT over-rode LOWERCASE - not because of source evidence that the title should be lowercase but because of an unsubstantiated claim that of a convention to use alternative capitalisation regardless of what sources did for a particular case. While CONSISTENT exists, if a cited policy exists it must also be reasonably construed if it is to be given any weight. This RM has nothing to do with the evidence presented at that or any other RM. But addressing your point without getting sidetracked, it is the role of commenting editors to present ''appropriate'' evidence to support their case and for editors opposing that case to interrogate such evidence to confirm it does evidence what it is purported to (noting that capitalisation is essentially a statistical question that requires a polling of sources to determine the proportion of capitalisation in prose). This RM is not just about the relationship of LOWERCASE to any one or more of the principles at CRITERIA. It addresses the relationship of CRITERIA to all of the matters covered by TITLEFORMAT, where I have seen discussions relating to LOWERCASE, SINGULAR, DEFINITE, subsidiary articles, persons names, TCS and trademarks that have prompted this. That is the reasons why this RfC is about the relationship between CRITERIA and TITLEFORMAT rather than CRITERIA and LOWECASE. Perhaps I might put this in perspective for you and link to your comment (response to me) , even though it is about the relationship between CONSISTENT and LOWERCASE. ] (]) 03:22, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*: Not a fork—that discussion is about a proposed rewording; this about levels of consensus. Either could fail and have no effect on the other. ]&nbsp;(]) 03:49, 4 May 2014 (UTC) <small>Converted by SMcCandlish from edit summary to comment</small>
**::Don't want to talk too much about a specific RM rather than the overall change, but if I had !voted in that RM, then yes, I would have placed very little weight on WP:CONSISTENT. And I agree with you that the community should take CONSISTENT less seriously. But I also think that this is a matter already mostly handled fine by our consensus process. If other editors in good standing want to prioritize CONSISTENT in areas I disagree, that's their right - the MOS is inherently ''suggestions'' rather than mandated right or wrong things, as it has to be because language changes over time.
*::Hair-splitting. The entire purpose of the RfC is to determine whether WikiProject Comics's preferred way of naming and disambiguating topics has consensus or should be altered. You reasonably can't then side-swipe that discussion by coming to another forum to challenge the consensus on the wikiproject's naming "guideline" on a tiny bit broader basis. It's like doing a RM on something and engaging in a big debate about that, but also taking it to AfD at the same time in an attempt to have the article merged into something else, as if the RM were moot already. Even if it's not blatant ]ping, it's still an unhelpful and potentially confusing fragmenting of discussion. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 05:40, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
**::The larger issue for me is the ngrams one - I'm thinking of stuff like the "Eurasian P/plate" RM where there was just a failure to agree on reality, and the closer bought the ngrams argument over the "here's what geologists who actually work in the field say" argument (which was a crazy thing to dismiss as "vibes"!). If you say that this isn't the issue you're raising here, fine, I could be persuaded to abstain, but I think ''that'' was the core of the original Battle of Panipat discussion, common name as decided by ngram analysis. If hypothetically it was ''indisputable'' there was completely no common name at all and just wild variance, then sure, lowercase b, and if hypothetically it was ''indisputable'' the > X% Battle usage threshold was met (where X varies by editor), then clearly it should be capital B. But as mentioned above, it is rare for the matter to be indisputable! So fiddling with which policy "wins" should have had little effect in my book, as the question was truly one of COMMONNAME, and that is clearly one where people just greatly disagree. (i.e. that we're just talking about a different reason to not move, that of "didn't make a convincing enough COMMONNAME case.") ] (]) 03:57, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks for pointing out the other discussion. That should be an OK place to work this out. ] (]) 05:50, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
**:::Picking ngrams over reliable sources is just incorrect. COMMONNAME itself says we should follow the most reliable sources. ] (]/]) 04:07, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::WikiProject Comics ''is'' agreed on the "preferred way of naming and disambiguating topics"—the proposal was not to change, add, or delete any of the agreed-on disambiguation terms—it's long since ceased to be debated.
**::::I couldn't agree more, but, unfortunately, that's not always how move discussions have gone in the past. I strongly believe the usage in relevant reliable sources should trump the usage of ngrams, which take into account a large swath of sources that may be unfamiliar with proper usage and capitalization. ] (]) 16:02, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::The intention of the ''proposed rewording'' was to discourage those unaware with policy from thinking that an article that falls under {{tld|WikiProject Comics}} should be disambiguated by default as (comics). Little did I know that members of the Project actually do believe that—an entirely separate question, concerning global policy, which is why I brought it here for clarification. The issues have little hope of being solved if the participants in the discussion are talking at cross purposes. ]&nbsp;(]) 06:06, 4 May 2014 (UTC)
**:::::Ngrams are generally the gold standard for assessing common name because unlike your search for "relevant reliable sources", which is an undefined and imprecise definition, they provide an objective and unbiased look at a wide variety of sources with a clear measure that isn't defined by anyone on Misplaced Pages, not to mention analysis by year. And book sources are usually presumed to be at the upper echelons of reliability too. Far too many RMs use cherry-picked lists of sources, many of which are part of the ] phallacy and are often just designed to support whatever viewpoint the RM nominator wants to convey. &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp;] (]) 23:15, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::Agreed, and I think we actually both agree on both of the problems raised by the wikiproject's expectations. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 02:39, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
**::::::Ngrams ''can'' be useful when it is clear that a single phrase refers to only a single topic and is used only in a single context. However when a single phrase has refers to multiple topics and/or is used in multiple context then it is not an accurate representation of any of them. ] (]) 01:08, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
**:::::::This is exactly my point of view, and it's why every title with a common noun in it, whether a proper name or not, seemingly ends up being downcased. ] (]) 14:24, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
**:::{{Ec}} Another case where an ngrams argument was simply incorrect was a situation where there were two topics with the same name, one was a proper noun and the other a common noun (it was an article about a geographically named regional railway line in England but I forget which one). One participant did not understand that there were two distinct topics - a specific individual railway line (the subject of the article) and railway lines in general in the same place - and kept insisting the ngrams showed that it wasn't a proper noun. However in reality the ngrams did not (and could not) distinguish between the two. There needs to be flexibility to interpret the context of the specific discussion and that is lacking from this proposal ] (]) 04:08, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No''', it's the other way around. Recognizability, naturalness, precision, concision, and consistency are more important than things like "Use singular form" and "Avoid definite and indefinite articles" and "Do not enclose titles in quotes". It should usually be possible to comply with all of these, but I pick the first set of principles over the little details. ] (]) 06:52, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No''', voorts is correct that our goal is not applying ] analysis to whether ] is making those eleven points secondary to the five points of ] or the superseding formatting guidelines. Any of these sixteen concepts can be the means to decide a requested move. ]&nbsp;(&nbsp;]&nbsp;) 16:15, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No''' per WhatamIdoing. ] (]) 22:14, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No'''. ] is by far the most important thing to consider for titles (and yes, that often means looking at ngrams as well as other evidence). Where there's a clear common name, the policy and longstanding practice mean we rarely fail to use that - even where consistency might not be met. If and only if the common name is unclear, then we invoke the five criteria directly and try to reach a consensus on which title fits them best. If after all that there's still a lack of clarity, then I'd invoke TITLEFORMAT at that point, but not any earlier. &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp;] (]) 23:20, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Yes'''. Cinderella157's analysis is correct, and many of the TITLEFORMAT points are non-optional, while all of the criteria are a prioritization juggling game of various preferences, any of which can be sacrificed when outweighed by other considerations, while much of TITLEFORMAT cannot. To the extent anything in TITLEFORMAT is actually optional, the solution is to separate its material into two lists, of mandatory versus conditional matters. The "No" commenters here all appear to be missing the point, and seem to have been triggered into strange defensive contortions by wording like "supersede" or "override". <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 02:03, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
*:The only truly non-optional point under TITLEFORMAT is TSC because that's a technical, rather than style, issue. At least four of the TITLEFORMAT points have exceptions—including singular form, don't use abbreviations, use nouns, and trademarked names—so they are not required in all circumstances. Several of them don't really ever come into play in RMs, like use sentence case, subsidiary articles, don't use quotation marks, and italics, largely because nobody could credibly argue against those. For example, I can't think of a circumstance where we wouldn't italicize a film or book page title. The follow reliable sources point is just an amalgam of several of the CRITERIA. Regarding your analysis of the no !votes: the RfC is expressly asking us whether a certain part of a policy should supersede another. Indeed, Cinderella157 has used the phrase "over-ride" 8 times in this discussion so far. It's not a "strange defensive contortion" to respond to those points. ] (]/]) 02:27, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
*::The constant flood of over-capitalization RMs of multi-word titles tells us that "use sentence case" is actually quite important; while no one proposes "Use title case!", what they want effectively amounts to that, so this line-item in the policy is an additional shield against their over-stylization whims (though lack of consistent support in independent RS is more often the main one, whether it be a ] or ] or ] or ] or ] question). The point about quotation marks actually does come up, though rarely (mostly with regard to phrases from conventional quotations or from Internet memes, and exceptionally with regard to titles of works that have internal, or are surrounded by, quotation marks of their own, like some famous David Bowie material). Italics: we have a long-term, persistent contingent who hate that WP house style is to put all major works in italics regardless of medium (they want to deny this style to electronic publications). I have to rather amusedly note that your engaging in another defensive contortion, handwring over {{em|just how many times}} the proponent used a term that triggered your defensive reaction, has rather the opposite of your intended effect of disproving my point.<!-- --><p>The question here is quite simple: which section of the policy has precedence when there's a perception of conflict beteen them? The answer has to be TITLEFORMAT because making it secondary would regularly (not strangely exceptionally, when sources really seem to dictate it) produce inconsistent titles even within the same category of subjects, yet {{em|CRITERIA includes CONSISTENT}}. That is, CRITERIA is effectively telling us, in CONSISENT, that it is secondary to TITLEFORMAT.</p><!-- --><p>A potential way around the problem, or perceived problem, here would be to merge these sections one way or another, so that all the actual title criteria we employ, including formatting ones, are in one place. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 07:05, 21 November 2024 (UTC)</p>
*:::Please stop calling the no !votes defensive contortions. You said no !votes were using words like "override"; I was pointing out that it was Cinderella using that word. ] (]/]) 14:29, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::Except I said {{em|nothing like that at all}}, but quite the opposite, namely that Cinderella157 did in fact use these terms and then you and various other "No" !voters are reflexively and emotionally reacting to what they could mean in some other context instead of analyzing their actual meaning and implications in this context. So, your apparent anger at me here really has no basis. You either do not understand the argument I am making, or are striking the pose that you don't understand, because you don't like it but can't seem mount a sensible counter-argument. Regardless, I predict no utility in me going round in circles with you any further. This kind of ] stuff is just pointless and anti-consensus. Instead of responding to anything substantive I said, you've retreated to an "offended" posture, in which bluster is used as a ] to dodge every single element of the substance, and that bluster is based on blatantly misreading everything I wrote. ]. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 10:41, 24 November 2024 (UTC); tone revised 15:28, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No''' The point at issue is an attempt to lower-case an article title. ] states that "{{tq|...the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice ... Disagreements are resolved through consensus-based discussion, not by tightly sticking to rules and procedures}}". We had a consensus-based discussion and that establishes the accepted practice. If there then seems to be inconsistency in the rules then the rules should be loosened, not tightened, so as to accommodate the accepted practice. ]🐉(]) 08:24, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*:No, the point at issue is not an attempt to lowercase an article title. It was prompted by quite a number of discussions where the issue was not just LOWERCASE but other matters at TITLEFORMAT v CRITERIA. {{tq|The intent of this RfC is to determine what the policy is actually telling us as written (how it should reasonably be construed) as opposed to what editors think the policy should be telling us.}} This is stated in the ''Background'' section. It continues: {{tq|If there is a disjunction between the two, then an amendment to the policy is indicated but that would be another issue.}} An inconsistency or a disjunction have the same result: if there is something wrong with how the policy is written then it needs to be amended and improved. It is unfortunate that responses here are more concerned with defending what people think the policy says than considering whether that is what it is saying in both the letter and the ''spirit and intent'' represented by consistency with other P&G. ] states: {{tq|Remember, the participants in any given discussion represent only a tiny fraction of the Misplaced Pages community whose consensus is reflected in the policy, guidelines and conventions to which all titles are to adhere.}} There is a difference in CONLEVEL between P&G and an RM. Arguments at an RM are to be assigned weight {{tq|giving due consideration to the relevant consensus of the Misplaced Pages community in general as reflected in applicable policy, guidelines and naming conventions.}} If there is an inconsistency in P&G in what it says or what it might be thought to say, then this should be remedied else it is a case of ''garbage in, garbage out''. An unwritten principle of WP is continuous improvement. Even Voots grudgingly acknowledges I ''might be right''. ] (]) 10:16, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
:::We are told above that {{tq|For context, this stems from ] (about ])}}. I did not participate in that discussion and am here as a member of the wider community following the listing at ]. Insofar as there's a wider issue, it's that this policy page is so huge (about 5,000 words) that it contains numerous competing considerations. How these should be balanced and used has to be decided on a case-by-case basis and that's what the RM discussion did. There isn't a formal order of precedence and so the answer is still '''No'''. ]🐉(]) 15:36, 22 November 2024 (UTC)


*'''No''' per all of the reasoning above (nomination request to simply say 'Yes' or 'No', so no, of course not). ] (]) 14:04, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
== Proposed wording for the ''Subject preference'' RfC at the WP:NCP talk page ==
*'''No.''' To draw an analogy to broader Misplaced Pages governance—if the CRITERIA are the five pillars of titling, TITLEFORMAT is its MOS. In that sense, while we should follow TITLEFORMAT as much as is practical, it's nevertheless still possible for an argument to achieve consensus that a given article's title should diverge from TITLEFORMAT's norms in order to serve the overarching principles behind the titling process. Indeed, many of TITLEFORMAT's sections essentially enshrine this line of thinking outright, whether by noting standard exceptions (], ], ]) or directing us to follow the usage by RS (] or ]). ] (] • ]) 15:52, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No''' per Voorts, Andrew, SnowFire and others. They make the point much better than I could. ~~ ] (]) 15:47, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''No''' - Probably over-kill at this point but simple formatting issues are not nearly as important as the issues that ] addresses. ] (]) 22:12, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}


== Reduce bloat, banners, and bananas ==
Over a month ago an RfC on subject preference was initiated at ].


There's too much inaccessible content around this wiki. Also the sections in the article are trying to convey few things in many round-about ways. Verbosity is understandable, but not at the expense of wasting time of readers. Time is finite. For example, there's a wall of purple stuff right above this editor, there could be a yellow / red call-out above that, but I'm writing here, not in my browser's address bar. ] (]) 09:02, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
In one of the subsections of that RfC a new wording to be included in the guideline is proposed: ].


:The best way to reduce, is to remove entire sections, and then engage contention. Since it is categorised as contentious topic, resolving all raised concerns by humans here can be solved with active contention. ] (]) 09:04, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
It was suggested to avoid mere local consensus, so this proposal has been listed at ].


::The wall of purple text is a closed talk page section. At this page, talk page sections are automatically archived 60 days after the last comment in that section if more than 5 sections are present. ] (]) 09:19, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
Feel free to chime in! --] (]) 06:27, 5 May 2014 (UTC)


== Notice of move discussion ==
== Weighting of sources in determining ] and ] ==


A ] is underway concerning the titles of several articles which may be of interest to this project. Interested parties can ]. ]'']'' 10:29, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
When we look at usage in reliable sources to determine ] and ], should we be weighting the sources? Is usage in some reliable sources, like books, more influential than usage in other reliable sources, like newspapers?


== Overprecision in (sports)people ==
My view is that we're trying to determine the name most users would expect to be used to refer to the topic at issue. So in that context I don't see why some reliable sources should be weighted more than others... I mean, as long as it's a ], it should count the same. No?


Could you please check ]. ] (]) 23:09, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
This is relevant in situations like what appears to be happening at ], where a relatively obscure topic happens to have more coverage in (archived, low-circulation) books than the more-likely-to-be-sought (based on page-view counts) article. --]2] 16:23, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
:To my mind, source quality should be '''a''' factor in determining a COMMONNAME ... its just not necessarily the ''deciding'' factor. I have no problem giving a bit of extra weight to high end sources... but that extra weight would not necessarily ''out'' weigh raw numbers. Essentially, source quality makes for a good tie-breaker, when the source usage is somewhat mixed.
:Here is how I think it works: First look through ''all'' reliable sources (regardless of where they fall on the quality scale of reliable sources). If one name stand out as being used significantly more often... use that. If there several names that are common... take a ''second look'' at the source usage, factoring in the quality of the sources... if one of the choices is clearly favored by sources on the high end of the quality scale... use that. and if even the high end sources are mixed... then we have to say that there ''is'' no COMMONNAME. ] (])-
:As for determining WP:PRIMARYTOPIC... I am not sure how source quality would be an issue. It's more a question of whether one topic is significantly more WP:NOTABLE than another. ] (]) 23:26, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
:: I would contend that books are ''highly'' overrated as a source. It is ''much'' easier for the average individual to get a book published than it is to get published in a peer-reviewed journal, or to get a regular job as a journalist with a reputable newspaper or other media outlet. There are plenty of books in print that are filled with outrageous, incorrect, and completely unsupported claims and usages. ] ] 23:53, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
:::I have not necessarily been talking about books. What constitutes a "quality" source really depends on the subject matter. For example, in an article relating to pop music, a magazine like ] would be a high end "quality" source. A magazine like ] would be at the other end of the spectrum. ] (]) 01:08, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::: I'm really not sure that we should be in the business of making those judgments. Obviously, there are sources like the supermarket tabloids for which objective evidence of their absence of reliability exists, but short of that kind of unreliability, I wouldn't consider a ''Rolling Stone'' to be more authoritative a source for the common name of a band, song, or other music topic than ''Teen Beat''. ] ] 01:30, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:: It's well covered at ]. There are many factors, and being a "book" isn't much. Whether it's a ] or ] is also very important. Much as it says at WP:NOR, primary sources, whether a peer reviewed article in a reputable journal, or a ballot paper, are easily misused. Independent, reliable, reputable secondary sources, and specifically the ones actually, explicitly, supporting the article content, should be weighted most highly. The parallels with Misplaced Pages-notability are not co-incidental. --] (]) 01:26, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::] is about evaluating reliability of sources for the purpose of establishing veracity of information in deciding what to include in article context. In that context it makes sense to weight different types of sources differently, and ] does cover that well.<p>But in title-decision making we just look at usage in sources to help us figure out what is going to be natural and recognizable to our readers (when it's not obvious). In that context, what is the point of distinguishing sources based on quality? How is that going to help us determine which is more natural or recognizable? --]2] 04:30, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::I've found that not to be true at wikipedia. We do not look at source usage as the "determining" factor in titling articles. Maybe it's written that way in policy and guidelines, but in practice titles are based on a majority of editors preferences, regardless of sourcing. Whether that's good or bad doesn't really matter... it's the way it works. ] (]) 07:17, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::Well, just maybe, "we" should do things a little more consistently with the rest of the project. Maybe article titling should not be a separate "expertise", but something natural to content-writers. Distinguishing sources by quality is a base skill that should be applied to all questions relating to content. --] (]) 05:25, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::Again, ''why?'' Distinguishing sources by quality makes sense for content veracity determination. It makes no sense for determining what term is natural and recognizable. Are the higher quality reliable sources, like scholarly journals, going to use names that are more likely to be natural and recognizable than the names used by lower quality sources, like newspapers? If so, how? If not, why distinguish by source quality in the context of title determination? --]2] 06:24, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::Because Misplaced Pages should be guided by its sources. --] (]) 07:10, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Why? Why should WP be guided by its sources? I suggest there are two different answers, depending on whether you're talking about content or title determination. <p>For content determination WP should be guided by its sources to make sure the material is accurate and verifiable. For this higher quality sources are even better. <p>But for title determination, WP should be guided by the sources because we presume our readers also read the sources, or at least the usage they are familiar with is likely to be reflected in the sources, and so terminology usage in the sources is going to be natural and recognizable to them. Distinguishing among sources qualities simply makes no sense in this context. --]2] 07:39, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::: I get to the same basic result through different reasoning. If Misplaced Pages distinguished which were the most "high level" sources relative to a topic for purposes of determining a name, we would probably have an article on '']'' rather than ]. We seem to go in the opposite direction from that. I completely agree that Misplaced Pages is guided by its sources, but I don't think it is within our power as neutral arbiters to be assigning "high" and "low" level rankings to sources for purposes of determining a common name. ] ] 13:13, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::Poor example... we don't have a significant majority of high end sources that use "Equus Ferus caballus" over "Horse" (in fact the majority of high end sources use "horse"), so that isn't a case where source quality would be a factor (and even if a significant majority of high end sources ''did'' use "Equus Ferus caballus" instead of "hourse" the sheer volume of sources that use "horse" would '''out''' weigh the issue of source quality). Again, commonness in high quality sources (call it QUALITYCOMMONNAME) simply makes for a good tie breaker when the over-all usage is somewhat mixed.
::::::B2C, You seem to be looking at this issue as an "always" or "never" thing. It isn't. No one is saying that source quality is ''always'' the determining factor. We are simply saying that source quality is '''a''' factor to be looked at, and can ''sometimes'' be a determining factor (in a few rare cases).
::::::Choosing the best title for an article is not an exact science with firm rules... instead it is a very inexact art. We intentionally don't take a formulaic approach to choosing article titles. We intentionally don't say "factor X always out weighs factor Y"... because while X may often (even ''usually'') out weigh Y... there are always going to be situations where Y should out weigh X. I know that some people want this policy to settle every dispute... it never will... because this policy intentionally makes ''having'' disputes ''part of the process''. We do list several factors that should be considered when holding a dispute (and it is an incomplete list)... but we intentionally don't say which factor is the most important. ] (]) 14:31, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Choosing titles is hardly a science at all, so of course it's inexact. But we have some control over where it falls on the exact-inexact spectrum, and the closer we are to the exact endpoint the fewer conflicts we should have. The problem with saying sometimes we consider source quality and sometimes we don't is that it moves us towards the inexact end of the spectrum, a cost, for no benefit, so far as I can tell. It means people can favor A over B because A is more common in "high quality" sources, while B is more common in reliable sources overall, and then the argument is about whether to go with usage in "higher quality" sources or with usage in RS overall... and can that ever really matter? Either way the result is a title commonly used in RS. Why not just pick the rule easier to follow (don't discern among sources), and go with that?<p>Yes, the process is inexact, but why make it even more inexact than it has to be? --]2] 16:28, 6 May 2014 (UTC)


Edit: actually, the issue applies to all people: ]. ] (]) 23:48, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
== Non English titles - what the heck is going on??? ==


== Plural form in foods (important) ==
] is a move proposal to move:


I would like to understand why, unlike some Italian foods (for example ] and ]), which are written in the plural, "]" isn't written in the plural, although in the most common name is the plural; for English names this rule doesn't apply? ] (]) 20:07, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
* ] → {{no redirect|Đặng Hữu Phúc}}
:Generally, we use the singular form unless the plural form is the overwhelming use in English. ] (]) 20:16, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
* ] → {{no redirect|Nguyễn Đình Thi}}
::{{Ping|DrKay}} exactly, and "hot dogs" is a ''slightly'' more common name than "hot dog", according to . ] (]) 20:18, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I said ''overwhelming''. ''slightly'' doesn't cut it. ] (]) 20:21, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
::::{{Ping|DrKay}} all right. ] (]) 20:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
:''Panini'' and ''cannoli'' are a problem here. In English, they ''are'' singular. "I'd like a chicken panini, please, and a dozen cannoli(s) to go." I'd say English speakers are familiar enough with "-i" plurals (from "spaghetti", "linguini", etc.) that they may understand the use of these forms for the plural as well as for the singular, but they may not: it's "one cannoli", but either "two cannolis" ''or'' "two cannoli" is possible.
:See the second paragraph of the Etymology section of the ] (you provided the wrong link) article. I see that the ] article is confused about this, beginning, appallingly, with its first words, "Cannoli is". This is outright incorrect whether you're following Italian usage (in which case you'd have "Cannoli are") or English usage (in which case you'd have either "A cannoli is" or "Cannolis are"). See also ], which takes the approach of treating the word as plural, "Biscotti are".
:But one thing you generally won't hear from English speakers is "Can I have a panino/cannolo/biscotto, please"? And we don't even mean by "panini" or "biscotti" what Italian speakers mean by them. The same goes for "gelato". ] (]) 00:25, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
::{{Ping|Largoplazo}} what Americans and English, unfortunately, don't understand is that even we Italians don't usually say "spaghetto", because types of pasta are written in the plural even in Italian, but at the same time we Italians know which Italian foods to write only in the plural and which in both forms (however, it's written "linguine" and "fettuccine", not "linguini" and "fettuccini").<br />In any case, '''could you please correct the ] and ] pages?''' I'm not a native English speaker ('''also ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]'''). Thanks in advance. ] (]) 18:01, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
{{cot|indent=4.8em|bg=darkseagreen|O/t sidebar on favorite foods and recipes}}
:::I enjoy the occasional spaghetto as a light snack. ] (]) 07:17, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::You're funny, in a good way. ] (]) 09:07, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Do not forget that triumph of Italian-American cuisine called ], {{u|JacktheBrown}}. ] (]) 09:21, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{Ping|Cullen328}} I didn't know this brand. ] (]) 22:05, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::{{u|JacktheBrown}}, you were better off not knowing about it. Very bland and mushy. ] (]) 23:32, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{Ping|Cullen328}} as you well know, I love Italian cuisine very much and I consider it one of the three best in the world (''I'm not a snob''), but I also love other cuisines, such as Greek, Japanese, and Mexican. Since Italian-American cuisine was mentioned, could you recommend some Italian-American dishes to try? Obviously exclude all styles of American pizza. ] (]) 09:44, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::{{u|JacktheBrown}}, I would highly recommend ] with San Francisco ] to sop up the broth. Fresh ] is beloved in California and coastal areas to the north, and is the ingredient that makes Cioppino unique. I also enjoy ], if well made. I think that flavor of the marsala wine sauce is delightful. That dish would be easier to duplicate in Italy than Cioppino, which is a Pacific coast thing. ] (]) 10:23, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::: ], Cullen may indulge you, but in reality, this is a ], which is serious business at some level, with a goal to discuss and improve our policy on Article titles. If you would like to ask Cullen for recipes, a better venue would be ] or your own Talk page, where a certain amount of latitude is given (and we are all human, and need to decompress sometimes). But please remember that we are here to ]; this is ], and policy talk pages especially are not. Thanks for your understanding. ] (]) 10:00, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::{{Ping|Mathglot}} you're right, we were temporarily off topic. ] (]) 10:48, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::: ], looking back, I see you were not the instigator. I just want to add that I am as guilty as anybody else of little asides like this. I find a single humorous off-topic comment, maybe a reply or two, is fine (even beneficial, sometimes, to lighten the mood), but if it generates a lot of back-and-forth it starts to be a distraction. I think collapsing this part about recipes is appropriate at this point, and I hope you don't mind. I apologize for singling you out by name, and appreciate your gracious response. Collapsed. ] (]) 19:55, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
{{cob}}
:::{{tq|... we Italians don't usually say "spaghetto", because types of pasta are written in the plural even in Italian ...}}: I'm supposing Italians don't usually say "spaghetto" because it's extremely uncommon for someone to have a reason to speak of a single spaghetti noodle and that, if an Italian ''did'' have a reason to refer to a single spaghetti noodle ("You dropped a spaghetti noodle on the floor"), they ''would'' call it "un spaghetto". Is that not correct? ] (]) 13:07, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::{{Ping|Largoplazo}} exactly, well done, obviously also for this reason. Not to be picky, but it's spelled {{lang|it|'''uno''' spaghetto}}. ] (]) 21:41, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Ha, I know that rule, but forgot to apply it. It's been a while. Thanks. ] (]) 22:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{Ping|Largoplazo}} don't worry, I'm glad that you tried. ] (]) 22:30, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
* It's not just Italian cuisine. Some foods are naturally eaten in the plural: ], ], ], etc. Hot dogs are more of a one-at-a-time food, even in a ]. ]🐉(]) 11:05, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
**{{Ping|Andrew Davidson}} ] is also a food to be eaten one at a time (it's big), ] ("panzerotti"). ] (]) 22:15, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
**: It is important to remember here, that two things do not count in trying to decide what the title should be: 1) logic, and 2) how it's done in Italian. This has nothing to do either with irrationality or anti-Italian sentiment, it's simply that in English Misplaced Pages we call things the way they are used in English (in published, reliable sources) and with words of Italian origin, sometimes it is the same as how it's done in Italy, and sometimes it's different. When it's different, we follow English usage. I don't know the policy at Italian Misplaced Pages, but I bet it is the same thing with English loanwords (with Italian usage being decisive, of course). Every language does this; it is nothing surprising. The phrase ''two computers'' in Italian is ''due computer'', and any anglophone that shows up at Italian Misplaced Pages and tells them, "No no, it has to be ''due computers'' because you have to add -s in the plural" would have no leg to stand on. Other plurals: ''il film'' ⟶ ''i film''; ''il bar'' ⟶ ''i bar''; ''lo sport'' ⟶ ''gli sport''; ''il club'' ⟶ ''i club'', and so on. The situation here is the mirror image of that: we do not check what is correct in Italian when trying to determine what is the right title here; it plays no role. ] (]) 06:42, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
**:I'd be fine with panzerotto as that's what the has. That dish is similar to ] which we have in the singular form. ]🐉(]) 07:23, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
**::Would you please ]? I already tried months ago, but I didn't convince anyone. ] (]) 07:42, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
**:::"Calzone" notwithstanding, I think it will be a challenge to show that "a panzerotto" is more common than "a panzerotti". The use of the Italian singular form "calzone" as the English word doesn't show that English speakers are prone to using the Italian singular and plural correctly. In this case, "calzone" came through in singular form, but then in English no one calls more than one of them "calzoni", they're "calzones". (I'm not even sure how many people pronounce the "e".) And I guarantee that the plural of "pizza" is virtually always "pizzas" and not "pizze". The bottom line is: Stop trying to apply Italian grammar to the use of these words in English! It will only frustrate you. (Besides, it isn't as though Italian does a good job reflecting proper singular and plural of words it borrows from English{{emdash}}it doesn't bother with the plural form at all! ''Il film, i film'', ''il computer, i computer'', etc.) ] (]) 00:35, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
***:::{{Ping|Largoplazo}} the point is that the ] article had, since its creation, the title "panzerotto", and this until the move, which occurred this year. ] (]) 09:38, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
***::::I took a look at the move history and this doesn't appear to be the case—the article was created at "panzarotti" in 2006, and remained there until being ] in 2014. Then, over the course of this year, the article was moved three times (] in January, ] in June, and then ] shortly afterward). In any case, even if panzerotto had been the long-term title, longevity alone isn't necessarily an indicator of suitability; it's the reasoning that counts. ] (] • ]) 14:48, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
***:::According to the , in AE it rhymes with ''bone'', and in BE it rhymes with ''bony'' (both of which happen to agree with my perception of it, not that I get a vote). And yes absolutely agree with the bottom line: please forget everything you ever knew about Italian grammar and pronunciation, and stick strictly to English sources. Everything else is just a big waste of everybody's time. {{ec}} ] (]) 00:48, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
***::::(FWIW, using the same word for singular and plural goes way back in English. One sheep, two sheep. One fish, two fish. One cannon, two cannon. So one panzerotti, two panzerotti, welcome to the club.) ] (]) 06:24, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
***::::: This whole discussion reminds me of a big wall, where everyone feels compelled to write their own graffito. ] (]) 06:51, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
***::::::Well but that's how you know you're on Misplaced Pages ] (]) 17:00, 17 December 2024 (UTC)cv


* The OP seems keen to rewrite such culinary topics in Italian rather than English. I have started discussion about one such case at ]. ]🐉(]) 19:16, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
Above that, there is an RM discussion from 2011 where the no-diacritics version was favored, and so it stands today. But now people are saying this type of move is the norm. What ever happened to ]? I have no idea how to read, much less pronounce, the symbols on the right. There is no evidence that reliable English sources use these symbols. The argument that we have Unicode and they don't is a poor excuse. We have the whole Cyrillic alphabet available to us in Unicode, but that does not mean we're going to move all Russian names of people and places to Cyrillic titles. We follow usage in reliable English sources, period. What the heck is going on??? --]2] 16:47, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
*:I agree with JackTheBrown on that one. I'll comment there. ] (]) 23:43, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:Wiki policy or guidelines are one thing, while today's wiki usage and rfc's are another. Per RfC, no matter how common a name is spelled using the English alphabet, and no matter if the English sources are 99 to 1 in favor of the non-diacritic spelling, we are banned from using that spelling...not only in the title, but in even mentioning it exists as a common spelling anywhere else in the article. I thought you knew this by now? I've learned to live with this censoring as part of the modern wikipedia so you should probably move on yourself and accept that is the way it's done here now. ] (]) 17:48, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::I must have slept through something. When/where did that happen? Outrageous! --]2] 18:26, 6 May 2014 (UTC)


== Problematic "Use of" titles ==
::::The last one I recall was in an RfC on ]. Like I said, the banishment is here to stay so it's best to move on, live with it, and edit other things. ] (]) 18:46, 6 May 2014 (UTC)


It's come to my attention that there's a proliferation of un-encyclopedic titles being prefixed with the phrasing of "Use of". Is there a part of the guideline, aside from concision, that discourages this kind of unnecessary genitive possessive phrasing when simpler phrasing is clearly preferable? You notably won't find a single "Use of" article on Encyclopedia Britannica. Here, there's a plethora, such as ], which as an example could be more concisely and encyclopedically phrased as "]". In other examples, the phrasing is simply unnecessary or redundant, e.g.: ] – which could just read ], or ] – which is no different from ] or ]. It occurred to me that both ] and ] partly apply, since the "Use of" phrasing tends away from both simple and singular nouns. But is there anything else that more firmly guards against this? Thoughts? ] (]) 08:30, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::The short story is that some editors began to interpret ] (and in particular, the phrase "reliable for the statement being made") to mean that, in the area of diacritics, the only reliable source is one that is proven capable of using diacritics. A non-diacritic-using source is disregarded as unreliable for proving English-language usage or orthography. ] is correct that that view has won the day in the trenches, although there still has not been a WP-wide RFC that has settled the issue to my knowledge. For more insight, contact ], who has championed the pro-diacritics cause for a few years now. I could also point you to several RMs where this has been at issue. ] (]) 18:38, 6 May 2014 (UTC)


::::Although there may not have been a WP-wide RfC on the specific issue of titles, the RfC Fyunck(click) refers to above seems pretty clear. If the form without diacritics can't be mentioned in the article, then clearly it can't be the title. ] (]) 18:58, 6 May 2014 (UTC) :I’m not sure that this is something that needs a policy to fix… just file RMs and propose a better title. ] (]) 21:23, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::That RFC takes for granted that native diacritics should be used, and only asked if the non-diacritics version of a name should ''also'' be used. That's a different question from whether and in what circumstances diacritics should be used in the first instance. Note that the closer of that RFC explicitly punted on the issue of what to do with letters that differ between English and the native language - þ→th, for example. There are informal understandings - that an article on a person who has taken on citizenship or spent a significant amount of time in a country whose language lacks diacritics may drop the diacritics. There was also an RFC that In ictu points to on adopting Vietnamese diacritics usage in particular. I just have not seen a WP-wide RFC that comprehensively addresses diacritics usage. We may not need one (although it would be nice to coordinate real-life usage with ], and my guess is that only an RFC could do that), but I don't think there has been one. ] (]) 19:13, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::This is true... for that particular RfC. But in the tone of that RfC, in article after article, move request after move request, the majority of editors (including administrators) has been quite clear on what they want. Unless a person lives in the US and/or it can be shown that they personally use the English spelling of their names (i.e. their facebook account, twitter, personal website content, signature) then any form of the English alphabetized spelling is censored on wikipedia. It cannot be used, no matter the sourcing, in titles or in prose. So again we should probably move along to edit other interesting topics. One thing that could stand an update is the section at ] as it is untrue and out of date with the current practice. ] (]) 19:50, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::::I think calling this censorship is ridiculous. Rather, there is a general move to use the appropriate diacritics, even if in some cases the majority of english-language sources do not use said diacritics. I think this is different than other debates around what is a "preferred" name, etc, and is more a rather of correctness and accuracy. If a given source does not use diacritics at all, we cannot use that source to determine if diacritics *would* have been used by them if they could.--] (]) 19:58, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::::Yes - that is exactly how I described the position in a nutshell. But the point is, that's not the only rational position, and it's not the position of ]. It also doesn't take into account some of the nuances I mentioned above. And it doesn't change that, right now, as it has been for a long time, diacritics policy on WP is ''ad hoc'', or at least unwritten.<p>And yes, censorship is a far cry from just not having things come out the way one would prefer - using terms lke that does nothing to advance any discussion. ] (]) 20:08, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::::{{ping|Obiwankenobi}} The assumption you are making here is that if a source does not use diacritics it is because they can't, not because they choose not to. Anywhere else in Misplaced Pages, you would have to source that assumption in each and every case. ] (]) 20:19, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::We have plenty of examples of this - especially if you're talking about vietnamese diacritics, for which printing presses in some cases would choose not to use either because technically impossible or financially unrealistic. The best way to determine such cases is when they use vietnamese diacritics for some names, but not for others - like if they write Đặng Hữu Phúc was born in Vietnam (and not Việt Nam). There are also problems with using search engine results, which actually can strip off diacritics, as well as OCR. I've participated in some of these debates and claims were made that book X used name Y without diacritics, but on close examination of the book, it DID actually use the diacritics, but the summary by google books was misleading. I don't think we should conflate COMMONNAME issues around diacritics with things like ] vs ], since there isn't a difference in technological capability or editorial style around using one or the other.--] (]) 20:25, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::::It is censorship. It is banishment. Many sources don't use diacritics because they choose to follow English language customs. And there are sources that use both diacritics and non-diacritics... they don't count either. It is what the majority of editors want that counts, not sourcing. And you're kidding yourself by saying "some cases" or "the majority of English-language sources." You make it sound like it's close in the sourcing when it's not. Unless it's the "Inquirer" we do not pick out our sources, we use all of them. Now if this happens on only some articles or some spellings you might have a point about censorship. If we are permanently stopped from using the English spelling anywhere in an article, everywhere, it is what it is no matter how candy-coated you'd like to make it. It's not a discussion on changing things. I'm not advocating a change back... I'm simply letting B2C know how and why it works here now so he can move on to better things. ] (]) 20:21, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::If you read that RFC, that was specifically about whether there was any use or value to the reader in repeating ascii-titles in the lede, like Đặng Hữu Phúc (Dang Huu Phuc). There was a broad consensus against this, since it was felt the reader didn't need to see the stripped-down version. Again, calling this censorship means you misunderstand what the term censorship means.--] (]) 20:25, 6 May 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::::You are reading that RfC way too narrowly and naively, without the understanding of what went on before or after. And you are 100% wrong about the lead only. The Englsish spelling can't be mentioned anywhere, anytime. It can't be in the title, it can't be in the prose. It is you who aren't comprehending that wikipedia expurgates things based on what editors want. Go ahead and ask the many contributors to that RfC what they intended with it and the 1000s of move requests before and after. English alphabet spellings are banished if it can be shown that a source spells the name differently in their home country, regardless of the number of English language sources. ] (]) 21:26, 6 May 2014 (UTC)

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Is this a valid disambig page?

An article I have watchlisted Eliza Smith has been turned into a disambig page, with the article that was there previously moved to Eliza Smith (writer). Added to the new disabig page are Eliza Kennedy Smith, Eliza Bland Smith Erskine Norton and Eliza Doyle Smith. All three of the 'non-Eliza Smith' articles have been around for a while with no need for a disambig page (particularly one that isn't Eliza Smith). Is this not a case where hatnotes would be preferable to a disambig page, given they have 'natural' disambiguators? (I ask this from a position of complete ignorance on disambig pages, which I rarely get involved with... - SchroCat (talk) 09:10, 2 October 2024 (UTC)

The place to ask such questions is usually Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Disambiguation, but I can tell you right now that the answer you will get is that this is a perfectly fine disambiguation page. Any person with a given first name and last name is likely to be identifiable by that name, irrespective of whether a middle name (or maiden name) is interposed. If there is an argument that Eliza Smith (writer) is the primary topic of the page, then the disambiguation page can be moved to a "Foo (disambiguation)" title, but it seems unlikely that such a short article on a person prominent so many decades ago would be primary. BD2412 T 12:49, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
That's great - thanks very much. I don't think the writer is likely to be the primary (or at least, if she is, it'll be by a very narrow margin and I'd be surprised),but it's good to know. Cheers - SchroCat (talk) 12:55, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
Of course not, but it could become clearer if the Disambiguation page is improved for readability. RealAdil (talk) 09:07, 29 November 2024 (UTC)

Remove UE as a whole.

It makes no sense that anything that has a non-English name is translated in English. I think this should be revised considering that in Québec, we fought tooth and nail to protect our language, and now English Misplaced Pages mindlessly follow the English-language newspapers without ever considering what the majority of French-language newspapers says. LilianaUwU 04:31, 24 October 2024 (UTC)

This Misplaced Pages is written in English. We follow English-language usage. If you prefer to read Misplaced Pages in French, then the link is http://fr.wikipedia.org. 162 etc. (talk) 04:42, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
English or not, when the French name is the only official one, whether sources use another name is not important. Maybe I'm wrong when it comes to the PLQ, but there are plenty other examples where it's not the case. LilianaUwU 04:52, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
>whether sources use another name is not important
Well, it is. Per the policy, "Misplaced Pages does not necessarily use the subject's official name as an article title; it generally prefers the name that is most commonly used (as determined by its prevalence in a significant majority of independent, reliable, English-language sources.)"
I seriously doubt that you'll find consensus to change that. 162 etc. (talk) 05:00, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
UE doesn't hold that titles should be universally translated to English, it only holds that titles should use the form that's most common in English-language RS. (In this respect, it basically extends the principles of WP:COMMONNAME and WP:RSUE.) This often results in the adoption of translated titles, but also allows for moves in the other direction if sources support it: for instance, the article Seitō (magazine) used to be titled after the magazine's translated name Bluestockings, but moved to its current title by RM consensus because Seitō was more prevalent in English sourcing. ModernDayTrilobite (talkcontribs) 18:16, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
It makes no sense that anything that has a non-English name is translated in English. Then you should be pleased to learn your premise is mistaken: the guideline doesn't call for that (read it again: it says "should follow English-language usage", not "should translate into English"), and not everything that has a non-English name is translated to English here (though it may be transliterated): Der Spiegel (not "The Mirror"), Mainichi Shimbun (not "Daily Newspaper"), Haaretz (not "The Land"), Touche pas à mon poste ! (not "Don't touch my TV!"), Amores perros (not "Love's a Bitch"), Izvestia (not "News"), Livorno (not "Leghorn"), Mechelen (not "Mechlin"), etc. Even with respect to Quebec: we have Trois-Rivières, not "Three Rivers".
As far as I know, what's been fought for in Quebec is the primacy of French and the use of authentic French words when speaking and writing in French, not to dictate to users of English how to speak and write English when they are speaking and writing in English. In any event, this isn't Misplaced Pages for Quebec, it's English Misplaced Pages for the entire world.
Further, French Misplaced Pages has articles titled fr:Royaume-Uni and fr:États-Unis and fr:Californie, not "United Kingdom" and "United States" and "California". Why should English Misplaced Pages follow a different approach? Largoplazo (talk) 18:33, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
Why would we consider what French-language newspapers say when we ARE WRITING IN ENGLISH? I don't tell you how to speak and write French, your attempt tell us how to speak and write English is monstrously offensive. --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 15:48, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
And to the list of examples, one could add Mein Kampf (not My Struggle), Cirque du Soleil (not Sun Circus), Pravda (not Truth), Germany (not Deutschland), and on and on. I can only agree strongly with Khajidha: your premise is mistaken, your argumentation is baseless, and your proposal has no chance. Feel free to raise it again, though, after you have fixed the titles of the following articles at French Misplaced Pages so they all have the proper English titles: Californie, Irlande, Le Cap, Chambre des lords, Parc national de Yellowstone, and La Nouvelle-Orléans. Et passez une très bonne journée ! Mathglot (talk) 06:08, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
WP:OFFICIALNAME is also pertinent here, since part of the basis of the OP's idea seems to be that because the organization's official name is English, en.WP has to write it that way regardless what the preponderance of English-language sources are doing.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  10:44, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
  • We don't need to throw the baby out with the bathwater, but USEENGLISH is, in my view, second only to COMMONNAME in how much there's a disconnect between what people think it says and what it actually says. Misplaced Pages deliberately does not have a preferred form of English, yet, for example, I often see people in NZ-related RMs try to pull the "Māori-derived terms aren't really English" card (which coincides with the recent anti-indigenous pushback amongst white conservatives in AU/NZ politics). I think we do need a WP:NWFCTM equivalent for the article titles policy, because even though some older people halfway across the world might still call it "Ayers Rock", the COMMONNAME for years has always been Uluru. Sceptre (talk) 19:11, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

Clarification regarding language of WP:RECOGNIZABILITY

Hello,

I am writing to inquire about the phrasing ...the subject area... in the Recognizability description. Does ...subject area... refer to the general topic area of an article's content or specifically the subject matter of the article in question? I ask because I have been participating in multiple WP:RM discussions, especially in the context of WP:NCROY. In addition, how ...subject area... is interpreted can affect my !vote rationale.

Example for those confused about my inquiry

To illustrate my point, consider the example of the article title for Emperor Alexander III of Russia. If ...subject area... is defined to be European history broadly speaking (i.e. a general topic area for the emperor), I would argue that Alexander III of Russia meets WP:RECOGNIZABILITY as is because he does not have the name recognition of Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, or even his son Nicholas II to go by just a cognomen or a regnal number without the "of Russia" qualifier.

In contrast, if ...subject area... is defined to be Emperor Alexander III of Russia (i.e. specifically the emperor himself), I would argue that Alexander III of Russia meets WP:RECOGNIZABILITY by truncating the article title to Alexander III because as someone familiar with the Russian ruler, I do not need the article title to tell me he is affiliated with Russia.

Please note that I am not asking this to rehash or pre-empt a move request involving WP:NCROY (In any case, I am skeptical that the Russian emperor is the WP:PRIMARYTOPIC for Alexander III because Alexander the Great a Scottish king had the same regnal name and number). I am asking this because I have never received an explicit clarification on this matter in the various RMs I have participated in.

Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thank you,

AndrewPeterT (talk) (contribs) 19:41, 1 November 2024 (UTC), last edited 14:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

N
Virtually nobody remembers Alexander the Great's regnal number, so he is obviously not a candidate for the primary topic.--User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 21:16, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
Thank you for noting this. I admit that I thought about that when I was writing my query, but I also believed that Alexander the Great could still be the primary topic for Alexander III on technical grounds. I probably should have used Alexander III of Scotland, who is commonly known by that regnal number, to illustrate my point. AndrewPeterT (talk) (contribs) 14:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Taking the revised version of the OP's scenario, of "Alexander III" in particular: in English-language sources, the Scottish monarch still only has only a bit more than half as much RS coverage as the Russian one . Whether 12K sources for the Scot and 20K for the Russian firmly establishes the latter as the WP:PRIMARYTOPIC might be open to some disputation (which would not be the case if it were something like 3K to 175K split). But the Scottish one clearly is not primary, and he would probably be the leading contender against the Russian by a wide margin. To answer the OP's more general question, "subject area" in this sense means heads of state and comparable figures (such as Popes and a few other people usually known by "Foobar IV" regnal-style numbering, perhaps inclusive of major non-states like duchies in some cases). It doesn't mean anything narrower that's dependent on the specific article content and context (like being Russian or from a particular era).  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  10:56, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

Request for comment on the relationship between WP:CRITERIA and WP:TITLEFORMAT

NO There is consensus that WP:TITLEFORMAT does not take precedence over WP:CRITERIA. Editors should continue to balance all relevant guidelines and policies when determining article titles, without giving inherent precedence to either section.

Most participants agreed that both sections are integral parts of the Article titles policy and should be balanced and considered equally when determining titles in a requested move (RM) discussion, on a case-by-case basis using the context of an article. Editors argued that neither section should override the other universally; instead, contributors should weigh all relevant factors alongside the policy's text. Some editors also suggested that WP:COMMONNAME and relevant sections in the Manual of Style were an additional important consideration in RM discussions.

The minority of contributors supporting the primacy of WP:TITLEFORMAT communicated that the strong and direct language in the section (e.g. "do" / "must" rather than "should do" / "can do") established precedence. However, opposing participants argued that policies are not set in stone, and that disagreements over their interpretation should be resolved through consensus-based discussions rather than strictly following the exact wording of the policy (WP:NOTLAW and WP:IAR). Furthermore, while editors supporting primacy also contended that enforcing precedence would prevent potential conflicts and maintain internal consistency within the policy, opposing editors rebutted that such disharmony and inconsistency was not widespread under the status quo.

Frostly (talk) 06:11, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

(non-admin closure)

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


For any proposed article title determined by the application of WP:CRITERIA the proposed title should nonetheless comply with WP:TITLEFORMAT (ie WP:TITLEFORMAT has primacy over WP:CRITERIA). Cinderella157 (talk) 00:03, 18 November 2024 (UTC)

For simplicity, comments can be made as a Yes or No to the RfC proposition.

Background

At WP:TITLEFORMAT, it is stated: The following points are used in deciding on questions not covered by the five principles; consistency on these helps avoid duplicate articles .

The meaning of any particular part of a policy should be construed within the fuller context and not in isolation. The question considers whether the two sections exist in harmony with each other or whether the application of any of the five criteria can be construed to over-ride any of the matters detailed in WP:TITLEFORMAT.

This RfC does not propose a change to the wording of this policy nor does it preclude a change. Cinderella157 (talk) 00:16, 18 November 2024 (UTC)

Note: Just as there are five principles listed at WP:CRITERIA, there are eleven matters (sections) to WP:TITLEFORMAT. The proposition deals with the relationship between WP:CRITERIA (as a whole) and WP:TITLEFORMAT (as a whole). 08:25, 18 November 2024 (UTC)

Intent The intent of this RfC is to determine what the policy is actually telling us as written (how it should reasonably be construed) as opposed to what editors think the policy should be telling us. If there is a disjunction between the two, then an amendment to the policy is indicated but that would be another issue.

Pinging editors that have already commented: WhatamIdoing, Thryduulf, Voorts, SnowFire, Adumbrativus, Extraordinary Writ, Novem Linguae and Mdewman6. Cinderella157 (talk) 10:35, 20 November 2024 (UTC)

Comments

  • Yes (as proposer) The wording at the intro to TITLEFORMAT states the considerations detailed therein are not covered by the five principles - matters raised therein fall outside the scope of CRITERIA. The matters identified at TITLEFORMAT mainly exist for technical reasons that should not be over-ridden (noting that it is rare to use must not on WP). Reading the subject guidance in the full context of this policy, the proposition represents both the spirit and intent and the letter of the policy. Accepting the proposition asserts a harmony between the two individual sections. Rejecting the proposition creates tension and disharmony within the policy. That would assume that the drafters of the policy lacked the perception to see such a conflict of ideas and/or, that such a conflict should exist. By Occam's razor (or at least its corollary) the reasonable (simplest) view is that the intention is one of harmony between the two sections. Cinderella157 (talk) 00:46, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
PS Many of the eleven matters identified at TITLEFORMAT use unambiguous emphatic language such as do not or use rather than should use. Such language serves to tell us that these matters are not optional. They are definitely not informing us on how to balance the five criteria. These are things that a proposed title cannot violate. Such language quite clearly establishes the relationship with CRITERIA and the primacy of the matters at TITLEFORMAT collectively. Cinderella157 (talk) 08:51, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
  • For context, this stems from this discussion (about this RM), where I was asked as closer to disregard !votes that invoked consistency. I declined to do so since I feel consistency is a policy consideration (WP:CONSISTENT; WP:CRITERIA) that editors are allowed to balance against other factors, but if editors think that style guidelines like MOS:CAPS should always take precedence, I'm happy to be recalibrated. Extraordinary Writ (talk) 01:08, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
    Just to be clear, it is not that MOS:CAPS takes precedence (at least not directly). It is that WP:LOWERCASE is part of WP:TITLEFORMAT. The weight given to MOS:CAPS comes from within WP:AT. Cinderella157 (talk) 01:26, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No WP:TITLEFORMAT should not have primacy over WP:CRITERIA; both are part of the WP:AT policy and should carry equal weight. WP:TITLEFORMAT addresses issues not directly addressed by WP:CRITERIA, in other words, it informs how to balance and invoke the 5 criteria, but is not something that the criteria can 'violate' or not. In the case of that RM, the fundamental question is whether "battle" is part of the proper noun or not, which essentially is a WP:COMMONNAME question- how do reliable sources normally write it. Thus, we have MOS:CAPS and, more specifically, MOS:MILCAPS, which are WP:GUIDELINES, which are specific invocations of a combination of WP:COMMONNAME and WP:LOWERCASE, which are both WP:POLICY. I don't think WP:CONSISTENT arguments should be completely discounted, but it's up to the RM participants and the closer to determine how much weight they carry. WP:CONSISTENT states consistency should be the goal to the extent it is practical and WP:TITLECON (an essay) discusses consistency arguments when other considerations are equal so it seems clear consistency should not be the only consideration. Personally, I think most battles significant enough to be known as "battle of x", "battle" is clearly part of the proper noun (the event usually being more important than where it occurred), but we must follow reliable sources. Mdewman6 (talk) 03:06, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No. Both policy sections include various factors that are used to determine an appropriate title on a case by case basis. In an RM discussion, any relevant factors should be balanced and weighed against one another to reach consensus. I don't see evidence of disharmony or major inconsistency requiring a massive change to policy. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. voorts (talk/contributions) 22:29, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
    This RfC does not propose a change to policy. It is a question of how the spirit and intent and the letter of two different parts of the policy, as they exist, should be reasonably construed. Cinderella157 (talk) 03:37, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
    That's splitting hairs. If there's only one way of reasonaly construing a policy, then that construction becomes the policy. voorts (talk/contributions) 14:32, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
    Reading CRITERIA and the supporting sections addressing the five principles (within the full context of the policy), it is essentially telling us that a proposed title is determined by weighing each principle and that each principle need not be given equal weight in a particular case. However, TITLEFORMAT tells us that the matters therein are questions not covered by the five principles - ie they are outside the scope of CRITERIA and the five principles. The matters at TITLEFORMAT are clearly quite separate from CRITERIA. The eleven matters at TITLEFORMAT tell us to do a certain thing, to not do a certain thing or that certain things might be done in narrowly construed circumstances. Compared with CRITERIA (and the five sections that explain the individual principles) TITLEFORMAT uses emphatic language. Reading the individual sections in the fuller context of the whole policy, TITLEFORMAT is essentially telling us to discard or modify a proposed title if it does not conform to any of the eleven matters therein. At no point does it suggest that any of the five principles might cover any of the matters at TITLEFORMAT. Consequently, it is not reasonable to posture that any of the five principles, either individually or in combination, might over-ride or supplant any of the matters at TITLEFORMAT - especially those which are made emphatically without exception.
    Yes, there is only one way that a rule, law or policy should be reasonably construed if it is robustly constructed - eg without ambiguity. But that is not always the case. Consequently, in the real world, rules and laws are often tested to determine how they should be reasonably construed. I make a reasoned case that the letter of the policy is that, matters at TITLEFORMAT have primacy over CRITERIA. In consequence there is harmony between the two sections internally and a harmony between WP:AT and other associated P&G. The internal and external harmony evidences that construing the relationship between the two sections this way represents not only the letter of the policy but the spirit and intent of the policy. Asserting otherwise creates tension, ambiguity, inconsistency and disharmony between the two sections and related P&G where none exists otherwise. Is there a reasoned argument that the alternative accurately represents the letter of the policy and the spirit and intent or is it just an opinion that I don't like it, then it should be made.
    Yes, n an RM discussion, any relevant factors should be balanced and weighed against one another. However, arguing an internal contradiction within a policy where none reasonably exists would be illogical and flatly contradict the policy. Accordingly, it should be discarded. Cinderella157 (talk) 02:07, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
    Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines are not statutes. They are not written by a single body at a single point of time; there's no legislative drafters or style guide; and the overriding concerns are not precision, consistency, or rule of law. Rather, they are written by several editors—many with opposing viewpoints—over the course of decades according to a process that values consensus, with the recognition that ignore all rules is an overriding principle. Your interpretation of AT as written might be correct, but it's beside the point. In current practice, RM discussions generally involve editors making arguments based on COMMONNAME, CRITERIA, TITLEFORMAT, or any of the various naming conventions, and then weighing between those arguments. One discussion might conclude with a consensus that consistency is more important than concision, while another might result in using a common name instead of a precise title. voorts (talk/contributions) 02:23, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
    If there's only one way of reasonaly construing a policy, then that construction becomes the policy. We can only construe a policy base on what is written. The purpose and intent of this RfC is to determine how the relationship between CRITERIA and TITLEFORMAT should be construed based on what is written within the fuller context of the policy. This is exactly the point. Proposing a title (be it the initial title or at an RM) is about balancing the five criteria for any particular case. That is what the policy is telling us and it is not disputed. But this is not the question posed by the RfC nor the point of the RfC. If the policy is telling us to comply with TITLEFORMAT, then that is what we do too. The intent of the RfC is not to determine what editors think the policy should say but what it actually says. If it doesn't say what the community think it should say, then it is ""broke" and should be fixed. However, that would be another matter since it is not the intent of this RfC to change the policy. Furthermore, IAR is not a get out of jail free card to be exercised whenever one just doesn't like the rules. Cinderella157 (talk) 10:06, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
    I'm a lawyer. I love getting in the weeds and arguing about the meaning of the law. But that's not how Misplaced Pages interprets or creates rules. Editors operate based on consensus, not legalistic readings of P&Gs. Please review WP:RAP and WP:PPP. voorts (talk/contributions) 14:10, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No. Voorts puts it well. Both sections contain factors that need to be considered in the context of an individual discussion and neither can be correctly stated as stronger than the other in all cases. Thryduulf (talk) 23:02, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
  • This RFC could use some examples placed prominently towards the top somewhere. I read it twice and do not understand it. If I spent another 5 minutes reading the linked policies I could probably puzzle it out, but including that information here would be helpful. –Novem Linguae (talk) 23:35, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
    Novem Linguae, it is a question of whether CRITERIA (or any particular principle therein) would over-ride any (one or more) of the eleven matters at TITLEFORMAT, noting that for many of these matters the language used is emphatic rather than optional. My response to Voorts might better explain the issue. I will give some examples if this helps. Some of these are related/analogous to article title discussions that have occurred.
    Would a proposed title that uses title case over-ride LOWERCASE on the basis that article titles using title case are more RECOGNISABLE or more NATURAL than article titles written in sentence case?
    Would a proposed title of #tag over-ride WP:TSC on the basis of recognisability/COMMONNAME?
    Would a series of sub-articles on a topic in a format similar to "Azerbaijan/Transport" (though using some character other than "/") on the basis of CONSISTENT, NATURAL or CONCISE over-ride Do not create subsidiary articles?
    Would one have a title "The Department of Foo", over-riding WP:DEFINITE on the basis of CONSISTENT and COMMONNAME (we always see "the Department of Foo" in sources) or "Wild horses", using a similar argument to over-ride WP:SINGULAR.
    Would we have "X Plate" for the names of individual tectonic plates citing CONSISTENT because all WP articles use "X Plate" over-riding LOWERCASE even though none of the individual plate names are consistently capped in sources. Or do we change all of these to lowercase on the basis of CONSISTENT because the majority of cases are consistently not capitalised in sources?
    Would CONCISE over-ride WP:TSC to use "¿" for an article about the inverted question mark?
    Cinderella157 (talk) 02:19, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No, Voorts is correct. Adumbrativus (talk) 02:37, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No. If any one guideline should have precedence, it's WP:COMMONNAME, which is the titling equivalent of how Misplaced Pages handles everything else (e.g. WP:DUEWEIGHT for when sources disagree on more factual matters). Perhaps WP:NPOVNAME, too (the titling equivalent of WP:NPOV). (Not seriously mentioning these as counterproposals, just an "IMO" on priority.)
    • Part 2: I don't want to sidetrack, but I also disagree that this is even applicable to the sample RM that caused this (which I did not participate in). Suppose an editor performs a, for purpose of discussion, indisputably incorrect ngrams analysis. They screwed something up, made a typo, who knows. But the results of that faulty ngram analysis indicate some rule in TITLEFORMAT should predominate. But... it doesn't matter, because garbage in, garbage out, so the would-be TITLEFORMAT guidance doesn't even really apply. Okay, the case of a clear error isn't common, but what's more common is a contested ngram analysis. Cinderella said in that RM and in others that ngrams can overstate the rate of capitalization, but a lot of people disagree and believe that ngrams can understate the rate of capitalization by mixing in normal uses of the term. Which side is "right" isn't important here, but the point is, if the raw evidence is contested, a closer shouldn't just close "because (some policy in TITLEFORMAT) says so". There's really two claims afoot here, one of raw evidence and one of how to apply policy, and the first is often harder to parse! I've seen RMs close on arguments that are (IMO) inarguably at variance with the facts on the ground, and I'm sure that others think the same in reverse of me. Point is, it's not even clear that this proposed change does what it's implied to do, and if it does it would lead to absurdities like my example before of a faulty analysis somehow prevailing because it invoked the "right" policy on the wrong grounds. SnowFire (talk) 00:00, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
      SnowFire, firstly, there is no change to WP:AT proposed here at all. The question is about how the existing letter and spirit and intent of the relationship between CRITERIA and TITLEFORMAT should be (correctly) construed. Secondly, while the discussion with Extraordinary Writ may have led to this RfC (one followed the other), the RM being discussed there was not the only matter leading to this RM. In that RM it was argued that the CONSISTENT over-rode LOWERCASE - not because of source evidence that the title should be lowercase but because of an unsubstantiated claim that of a convention to use alternative capitalisation regardless of what sources did for a particular case. While CONSISTENT exists, if a cited policy exists it must also be reasonably construed if it is to be given any weight. This RM has nothing to do with the evidence presented at that or any other RM. But addressing your point without getting sidetracked, it is the role of commenting editors to present appropriate evidence to support their case and for editors opposing that case to interrogate such evidence to confirm it does evidence what it is purported to (noting that capitalisation is essentially a statistical question that requires a polling of sources to determine the proportion of capitalisation in prose). This RM is not just about the relationship of LOWERCASE to any one or more of the principles at CRITERIA. It addresses the relationship of CRITERIA to all of the matters covered by TITLEFORMAT, where I have seen discussions relating to LOWERCASE, SINGULAR, DEFINITE, subsidiary articles, persons names, TCS and trademarks that have prompted this. That is the reasons why this RfC is about the relationship between CRITERIA and TITLEFORMAT rather than CRITERIA and LOWECASE. Perhaps I might put this in perspective for you and link to your comment (response to me) here, even though it is about the relationship between CONSISTENT and LOWERCASE. Cinderella157 (talk) 03:22, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
      Don't want to talk too much about a specific RM rather than the overall change, but if I had !voted in that RM, then yes, I would have placed very little weight on WP:CONSISTENT. And I agree with you that the community should take CONSISTENT less seriously. But I also think that this is a matter already mostly handled fine by our consensus process. If other editors in good standing want to prioritize CONSISTENT in areas I disagree, that's their right - the MOS is inherently suggestions rather than mandated right or wrong things, as it has to be because language changes over time.
      The larger issue for me is the ngrams one - I'm thinking of stuff like the "Eurasian P/plate" RM where there was just a failure to agree on reality, and the closer bought the ngrams argument over the "here's what geologists who actually work in the field say" argument (which was a crazy thing to dismiss as "vibes"!). If you say that this isn't the issue you're raising here, fine, I could be persuaded to abstain, but I think that was the core of the original Battle of Panipat discussion, common name as decided by ngram analysis. If hypothetically it was indisputable there was completely no common name at all and just wild variance, then sure, lowercase b, and if hypothetically it was indisputable the > X% Battle usage threshold was met (where X varies by editor), then clearly it should be capital B. But as mentioned above, it is rare for the matter to be indisputable! So fiddling with which policy "wins" should have had little effect in my book, as the question was truly one of COMMONNAME, and that is clearly one where people just greatly disagree. (i.e. that we're just talking about a different reason to not move, that of "didn't make a convincing enough COMMONNAME case.") SnowFire (talk) 03:57, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
      Picking ngrams over reliable sources is just incorrect. COMMONNAME itself says we should follow the most reliable sources. voorts (talk/contributions) 04:07, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
      I couldn't agree more, but, unfortunately, that's not always how move discussions have gone in the past. I strongly believe the usage in relevant reliable sources should trump the usage of ngrams, which take into account a large swath of sources that may be unfamiliar with proper usage and capitalization. Hey man im josh (talk) 16:02, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
      Ngrams are generally the gold standard for assessing common name because unlike your search for "relevant reliable sources", which is an undefined and imprecise definition, they provide an objective and unbiased look at a wide variety of sources with a clear measure that isn't defined by anyone on Misplaced Pages, not to mention analysis by year. And book sources are usually presumed to be at the upper echelons of reliability too. Far too many RMs use cherry-picked lists of sources, many of which are part of the WP:OFFICIALNAMES phallacy and are often just designed to support whatever viewpoint the RM nominator wants to convey.  — Amakuru (talk) 23:15, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
      Ngrams can be useful when it is clear that a single phrase refers to only a single topic and is used only in a single context. However when a single phrase has refers to multiple topics and/or is used in multiple context then it is not an accurate representation of any of them. Thryduulf (talk) 01:08, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
      This is exactly my point of view, and it's why every title with a common noun in it, whether a proper name or not, seemingly ends up being downcased. Hey man im josh (talk) 14:24, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
      (edit conflict) Another case where an ngrams argument was simply incorrect was a situation where there were two topics with the same name, one was a proper noun and the other a common noun (it was an article about a geographically named regional railway line in England but I forget which one). One participant did not understand that there were two distinct topics - a specific individual railway line (the subject of the article) and railway lines in general in the same place - and kept insisting the ngrams showed that it wasn't a proper noun. However in reality the ngrams did not (and could not) distinguish between the two. There needs to be flexibility to interpret the context of the specific discussion and that is lacking from this proposal Thryduulf (talk) 04:08, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No, it's the other way around. Recognizability, naturalness, precision, concision, and consistency are more important than things like "Use singular form" and "Avoid definite and indefinite articles" and "Do not enclose titles in quotes". It should usually be possible to comply with all of these, but I pick the first set of principles over the little details. WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:52, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No, voorts is correct that our goal is not applying textualist analysis to whether WP:TITLEFORMAT is making those eleven points secondary to the five points of WP:CRITERIA or the superseding formatting guidelines. Any of these sixteen concepts can be the means to decide a requested move. ViridianPenguin 🐧 ( 💬 ) 16:15, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No per WhatamIdoing. Ajpolino (talk) 22:14, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No. WP:COMMONNAME is by far the most important thing to consider for titles (and yes, that often means looking at ngrams as well as other evidence). Where there's a clear common name, the policy and longstanding practice mean we rarely fail to use that - even where consistency might not be met. If and only if the common name is unclear, then we invoke the five criteria directly and try to reach a consensus on which title fits them best. If after all that there's still a lack of clarity, then I'd invoke TITLEFORMAT at that point, but not any earlier.  — Amakuru (talk) 23:20, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Yes. Cinderella157's analysis is correct, and many of the TITLEFORMAT points are non-optional, while all of the criteria are a prioritization juggling game of various preferences, any of which can be sacrificed when outweighed by other considerations, while much of TITLEFORMAT cannot. To the extent anything in TITLEFORMAT is actually optional, the solution is to separate its material into two lists, of mandatory versus conditional matters. The "No" commenters here all appear to be missing the point, and seem to have been triggered into strange defensive contortions by wording like "supersede" or "override".  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  02:03, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
    The only truly non-optional point under TITLEFORMAT is TSC because that's a technical, rather than style, issue. At least four of the TITLEFORMAT points have exceptions—including singular form, don't use abbreviations, use nouns, and trademarked names—so they are not required in all circumstances. Several of them don't really ever come into play in RMs, like use sentence case, subsidiary articles, don't use quotation marks, and italics, largely because nobody could credibly argue against those. For example, I can't think of a circumstance where we wouldn't italicize a film or book page title. The follow reliable sources point is just an amalgam of several of the CRITERIA. Regarding your analysis of the no !votes: the RfC is expressly asking us whether a certain part of a policy should supersede another. Indeed, Cinderella157 has used the phrase "over-ride" 8 times in this discussion so far. It's not a "strange defensive contortion" to respond to those points. voorts (talk/contributions) 02:27, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
    The constant flood of over-capitalization RMs of multi-word titles tells us that "use sentence case" is actually quite important; while no one proposes "Use title case!", what they want effectively amounts to that, so this line-item in the policy is an additional shield against their over-stylization whims (though lack of consistent support in independent RS is more often the main one, whether it be a MOS:CAPS or MOS:TM or MOS:SIGCAPS or MOS:DOCTCAPS or MOS:SPORTCAPS question). The point about quotation marks actually does come up, though rarely (mostly with regard to phrases from conventional quotations or from Internet memes, and exceptionally with regard to titles of works that have internal, or are surrounded by, quotation marks of their own, like some famous David Bowie material). Italics: we have a long-term, persistent contingent who hate that WP house style is to put all major works in italics regardless of medium (they want to deny this style to electronic publications). I have to rather amusedly note that your engaging in another defensive contortion, handwring over just how many times the proponent used a term that triggered your defensive reaction, has rather the opposite of your intended effect of disproving my point.

    The question here is quite simple: which section of the policy has precedence when there's a perception of conflict beteen them? The answer has to be TITLEFORMAT because making it secondary would regularly (not strangely exceptionally, when sources really seem to dictate it) produce inconsistent titles even within the same category of subjects, yet CRITERIA includes CONSISTENT. That is, CRITERIA is effectively telling us, in CONSISENT, that it is secondary to TITLEFORMAT.

    A potential way around the problem, or perceived problem, here would be to merge these sections one way or another, so that all the actual title criteria we employ, including formatting ones, are in one place.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  07:05, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

    Please stop calling the no !votes defensive contortions. You said no !votes were using words like "override"; I was pointing out that it was Cinderella using that word. voorts (talk/contributions) 14:29, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
    Except I said nothing like that at all, but quite the opposite, namely that Cinderella157 did in fact use these terms and then you and various other "No" !voters are reflexively and emotionally reacting to what they could mean in some other context instead of analyzing their actual meaning and implications in this context. So, your apparent anger at me here really has no basis. You either do not understand the argument I am making, or are striking the pose that you don't understand, because you don't like it but can't seem mount a sensible counter-argument. Regardless, I predict no utility in me going round in circles with you any further. This kind of argument to emotion stuff is just pointless and anti-consensus. Instead of responding to anything substantive I said, you've retreated to an "offended" posture, in which bluster is used as a hand-wave to dodge every single element of the substance, and that bluster is based on blatantly misreading everything I wrote. Straw-man.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  10:41, 24 November 2024 (UTC); tone revised 15:28, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
  • No The point at issue is an attempt to lower-case an article title. WP:NOTLAW states that "...the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice ... Disagreements are resolved through consensus-based discussion, not by tightly sticking to rules and procedures". We had a consensus-based discussion and that establishes the accepted practice. If there then seems to be inconsistency in the rules then the rules should be loosened, not tightened, so as to accommodate the accepted practice. Andrew🐉(talk) 08:24, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
    No, the point at issue is not an attempt to lowercase an article title. It was prompted by quite a number of discussions where the issue was not just LOWERCASE but other matters at TITLEFORMAT v CRITERIA. The intent of this RfC is to determine what the policy is actually telling us as written (how it should reasonably be construed) as opposed to what editors think the policy should be telling us. This is stated in the Background section. It continues: If there is a disjunction between the two, then an amendment to the policy is indicated but that would be another issue. An inconsistency or a disjunction have the same result: if there is something wrong with how the policy is written then it needs to be amended and improved. It is unfortunate that responses here are more concerned with defending what people think the policy says than considering whether that is what it is saying in both the letter and the spirit and intent represented by consistency with other P&G. WP:RMCI states: Remember, the participants in any given discussion represent only a tiny fraction of the Misplaced Pages community whose consensus is reflected in the policy, guidelines and conventions to which all titles are to adhere. There is a difference in CONLEVEL between P&G and an RM. Arguments at an RM are to be assigned weight giving due consideration to the relevant consensus of the Misplaced Pages community in general as reflected in applicable policy, guidelines and naming conventions. If there is an inconsistency in P&G in what it says or what it might be thought to say, then this should be remedied else it is a case of garbage in, garbage out. An unwritten principle of WP is continuous improvement. Even Voots grudgingly acknowledges I might be right. Cinderella157 (talk) 10:16, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
We are told above that For context, this stems from this discussion (about this RM). I did not participate in that discussion and am here as a member of the wider community following the listing at WP:CENT. Insofar as there's a wider issue, it's that this policy page is so huge (about 5,000 words) that it contains numerous competing considerations. How these should be balanced and used has to be decided on a case-by-case basis and that's what the RM discussion did. There isn't a formal order of precedence and so the answer is still No. Andrew🐉(talk) 15:36, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Reduce bloat, banners, and bananas

There's too much inaccessible content around this wiki. Also the sections in the article are trying to convey few things in many round-about ways. Verbosity is understandable, but not at the expense of wasting time of readers. Time is finite. For example, there's a wall of purple stuff right above this editor, there could be a yellow / red call-out above that, but I'm writing here, not in my browser's address bar. RealAdil (talk) 09:02, 29 November 2024 (UTC)

The best way to reduce, is to remove entire sections, and then engage contention. Since it is categorised as contentious topic, resolving all raised concerns by humans here can be solved with active contention. RealAdil (talk) 09:04, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
The wall of purple text is a closed talk page section. At this page, talk page sections are automatically archived 60 days after the last comment in that section if more than 5 sections are present. DrKay (talk) 09:19, 29 November 2024 (UTC)

Notice of move discussion

A move discussion is underway concerning the titles of several articles which may be of interest to this project. Interested parties can join the discussion. SerialNumber54129 10:29, 30 November 2024 (UTC)

Overprecision in (sports)people

Could you please check Wikipedia_talk:Naming_conventions_(sportspeople)#Overprecision. fgnievinski (talk) 23:09, 4 December 2024 (UTC)

Edit: actually, the issue applies to all people: Wikipedia_talk:Naming_conventions_(people)#Edit_request_in_NCPDAB_(overprecision). fgnievinski (talk) 23:48, 4 December 2024 (UTC)

Plural form in foods (important)

I would like to understand why, unlike some Italian foods (for example panini and cannoli), which are written in the plural, "hot dog" isn't written in the plural, although in Ngram the most common name is the plural; for English names this rule doesn't apply? JacktheBrown (talk) 20:07, 11 December 2024 (UTC)

Generally, we use the singular form unless the plural form is the overwhelming use in English. DrKay (talk) 20:16, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
@DrKay: exactly, and "hot dogs" is a slightly more common name than "hot dog", according to Ngram. JacktheBrown (talk) 20:18, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
I said overwhelming. slightly doesn't cut it. DrKay (talk) 20:21, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
@DrKay: all right. JacktheBrown (talk) 20:22, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
Panini and cannoli are a problem here. In English, they are singular. "I'd like a chicken panini, please, and a dozen cannoli(s) to go." I'd say English speakers are familiar enough with "-i" plurals (from "spaghetti", "linguini", etc.) that they may understand the use of these forms for the plural as well as for the singular, but they may not: it's "one cannoli", but either "two cannolis" or "two cannoli" is possible.
See the second paragraph of the Etymology section of the Panini (sandwich) (you provided the wrong link) article. I see that the Cannoli article is confused about this, beginning, appallingly, with its first words, "Cannoli is". This is outright incorrect whether you're following Italian usage (in which case you'd have "Cannoli are") or English usage (in which case you'd have either "A cannoli is" or "Cannolis are"). See also Biscotti, which takes the approach of treating the word as plural, "Biscotti are".
But one thing you generally won't hear from English speakers is "Can I have a panino/cannolo/biscotto, please"? And we don't even mean by "panini" or "biscotti" what Italian speakers mean by them. The same goes for "gelato". Largoplazo (talk) 00:25, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
@Largoplazo: what Americans and English, unfortunately, don't understand is that even we Italians don't usually say "spaghetto", because types of pasta are written in the plural even in Italian, but at the same time we Italians know which Italian foods to write only in the plural and which in both forms (however, it's written "linguine" and "fettuccine", not "linguini" and "fettuccini").
In any case, could you please correct the panini and cannoli pages? I'm not a native English speaker (also biscotti, crostini, grissini, panzerotti, pizzelle, salami, spumoni, and zeppole). Thanks in advance. JacktheBrown (talk) 18:01, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
O/t sidebar on favorite foods and recipes
I enjoy the occasional spaghetto as a light snack. Hyperbolick (talk) 07:17, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
You're funny, in a good way. JacktheBrown (talk) 09:07, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
Do not forget that triumph of Italian-American cuisine called SpaghettiOs, JacktheBrown. Cullen328 (talk) 09:21, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
@Cullen328: I didn't know this brand. JacktheBrown (talk) 22:05, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
JacktheBrown, you were better off not knowing about it. Very bland and mushy. Cullen328 (talk) 23:32, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
@Cullen328: as you well know, I love Italian cuisine very much and I consider it one of the three best in the world (I'm not a snob), but I also love other cuisines, such as Greek, Japanese, and Mexican. Since Italian-American cuisine was mentioned, could you recommend some Italian-American dishes to try? Obviously exclude all styles of American pizza. JacktheBrown (talk) 09:44, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
JacktheBrown, I would highly recommend Cioppino with San Francisco sourdough bread to sop up the broth. Fresh Dungeness crab is beloved in California and coastal areas to the north, and is the ingredient that makes Cioppino unique. I also enjoy Chicken marsala, if well made. I think that flavor of the marsala wine sauce is delightful. That dish would be easier to duplicate in Italy than Cioppino, which is a Pacific coast thing. Cullen328 (talk) 10:23, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
Jack, Cullen may indulge you, but in reality, this is a policy talk page, which is serious business at some level, with a goal to discuss and improve our policy on Article titles. If you would like to ask Cullen for recipes, a better venue would be User talk:Cullen328 or your own Talk page, where a certain amount of latitude is given (and we are all human, and need to decompress sometimes). But please remember that we are here to build an encyclopedia; this is not social media, and policy talk pages especially are not. Thanks for your understanding. Mathglot (talk) 10:00, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
@Mathglot: you're right, we were temporarily off topic. JacktheBrown (talk) 10:48, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
Jack, looking back, I see you were not the instigator. I just want to add that I am as guilty as anybody else of little asides like this. I find a single humorous off-topic comment, maybe a reply or two, is fine (even beneficial, sometimes, to lighten the mood), but if it generates a lot of back-and-forth it starts to be a distraction. I think collapsing this part about recipes is appropriate at this point, and I hope you don't mind. I apologize for singling you out by name, and appreciate your gracious response. Collapsed. Mathglot (talk) 19:55, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
... we Italians don't usually say "spaghetto", because types of pasta are written in the plural even in Italian ...: I'm supposing Italians don't usually say "spaghetto" because it's extremely uncommon for someone to have a reason to speak of a single spaghetti noodle and that, if an Italian did have a reason to refer to a single spaghetti noodle ("You dropped a spaghetti noodle on the floor"), they would call it "un spaghetto". Is that not correct? Largoplazo (talk) 13:07, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
@Largoplazo: exactly, well done, obviously also for this reason. Not to be picky, but it's spelled uno spaghetto. JacktheBrown (talk) 21:41, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
Ha, I know that rule, but forgot to apply it. It's been a while. Thanks. Largoplazo (talk) 22:18, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
@Largoplazo: don't worry, I'm glad that you tried. JacktheBrown (talk) 22:30, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
  • It's not just Italian cuisine. Some foods are naturally eaten in the plural: corn flakes, baked beans, sprinkles, etc. Hot dogs are more of a one-at-a-time food, even in a contest. Andrew🐉(talk) 11:05, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
    • @Andrew Davidson: panzerotti is also a food to be eaten one at a time (it's big), yet someone has decided to write this food in the plural ("panzerotti"). JacktheBrown (talk) 22:15, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
      It is important to remember here, that two things do not count in trying to decide what the title should be: 1) logic, and 2) how it's done in Italian. This has nothing to do either with irrationality or anti-Italian sentiment, it's simply that in English Misplaced Pages we call things the way they are used in English (in published, reliable sources) and with words of Italian origin, sometimes it is the same as how it's done in Italy, and sometimes it's different. When it's different, we follow English usage. I don't know the policy at Italian Misplaced Pages, but I bet it is the same thing with English loanwords (with Italian usage being decisive, of course). Every language does this; it is nothing surprising. The phrase two computers in Italian is due computer, and any anglophone that shows up at Italian Misplaced Pages and tells them, "No no, it has to be due computers because you have to add -s in the plural" would have no leg to stand on. Other plurals: il filmi film; il bari bar; lo sportgli sport; il clubi club, and so on. The situation here is the mirror image of that: we do not check what is correct in Italian when trying to determine what is the right title here; it plays no role. Mathglot (talk) 06:42, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
      I'd be fine with panzerotto as that's what the OED entry has. That dish is similar to calzone which we have in the singular form. Andrew🐉(talk) 07:23, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
      Would you please propose a title change? I already tried months ago, but I didn't convince anyone. JacktheBrown (talk) 07:42, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
      "Calzone" notwithstanding, I think it will be a challenge to show that "a panzerotto" is more common than "a panzerotti". The use of the Italian singular form "calzone" as the English word doesn't show that English speakers are prone to using the Italian singular and plural correctly. In this case, "calzone" came through in singular form, but then in English no one calls more than one of them "calzoni", they're "calzones". (I'm not even sure how many people pronounce the "e".) And I guarantee that the plural of "pizza" is virtually always "pizzas" and not "pizze". The bottom line is: Stop trying to apply Italian grammar to the use of these words in English! It will only frustrate you. (Besides, it isn't as though Italian does a good job reflecting proper singular and plural of words it borrows from English—it doesn't bother with the plural form at all! Il film, i film, il computer, i computer, etc.) Largoplazo (talk) 00:35, 16 December 2024 (UTC)

Problematic "Use of" titles

It's come to my attention that there's a proliferation of un-encyclopedic titles being prefixed with the phrasing of "Use of". Is there a part of the guideline, aside from concision, that discourages this kind of unnecessary genitive possessive phrasing when simpler phrasing is clearly preferable? You notably won't find a single "Use of" article on Encyclopedia Britannica. Here, there's a plethora, such as Use of chemical weapons in the Syrian civil war, which as an example could be more concisely and encyclopedically phrased as "Chemical weapon use in the Syrian civil war". In other examples, the phrasing is simply unnecessary or redundant, e.g.: Use of Nazi symbols in Taiwan – which could just read Nazi symbolism in Taiwan, or Use of torture since 1948 – which is no different from Torture since 1948 or Torture (1948–present). It occurred to me that both WP:SINGULAR and WP:NOUN partly apply, since the "Use of" phrasing tends away from both simple and singular nouns. But is there anything else that more firmly guards against this? Thoughts? Iskandar323 (talk) 08:30, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

I’m not sure that this is something that needs a policy to fix… just file RMs and propose a better title. Blueboar (talk) 21:23, 3 January 2025 (UTC)