On this beautiful day of
for typo edit summaries:
spelling fix: ya'll-->y'all [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: geneology-->genealogy [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: geneologie-->genealogy [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: geneologies-->genealogies [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: curiousity-->curiosity [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: an historian-->a historian [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: an historic-->a historic [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: an historical-->a historical [[WP:TYPO]]
spelling fix: an history-->a history [[WP:TYPO]]
Interests
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![]() | This user has adopted the typo "geneologie" to nurture. |
![]() | This user has adopted the typo "geneologies" to nurture. |
![]() | This user has adopted the typo "curiousity" to nurture. |
![]() | This user has adopted the typo "an historian" to nurture. |
![]() | This user has adopted the typo "an historic" to nurture. |
![]() | This user has adopted the typo "an historical" to nurture. |
![]() | This user has adopted the typo "an history" to nurture. |
Tip of the moment...
![]() The lead section
The lead section is an essential summary of an article, located above the first heading. In the source text (the text in the edit window), a heading looks like this:
The lead section is a very important part of every article. The length should correspond to the overall length of the article: an article of 50,000 characters might well have a three paragraph lead, while one of 15,000 or less should limit itself to one or two paragraphs. The text should give a good overview of the article, but it should also get the reader hooked and interested in learning more. Take a look at some featured articles for inspiration. It is often a good idea to align a representative image with the lead by placing – – Read more: To add this auto-randomizing template to your user page, use {{totd-random}}
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Instead of doing something useful, You have been staring at this page since 05:27 Sunday, July 7, 2024 UTC. |