User:Ro Thorpe

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Revision as of 11:43, 12 August 2010 by imported>Ro Thorpe
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Please note: messages are always welcome, but I shall be in England, and offline, from 15 to 25 August.


A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Use in English
Alphabetical word list
Retroalphabetical list  
Common misspellings  

Articles I started

English, using special accent pronunciation system: Developing Article Apostrophe: in cluster; in lists Developed Article British and American English English irregular nouns Developing Article English irregular verbs Developing Article English phonemes Developing Article English spellings (many thanks to Chris Day for the above objet d'art; to find out what 'retroalphabetical' means, coined by me in 1995, Stub OED please note, click on one of the blue squares) Stub English verbs Developing Article French words in English Developed Article Hyphen Developing Article Silent letters in English Developing Article Spelling pronunciation Developing Article A Developing Article B Developed Article C Developing Article D Stub E Developing Article F Developing Article G Developing Article GH Developing Article H Stub I Developing Article J Developing Article K Developing Article L Developing Article M Developing Article N Developing Article O Developing Article P Developing Article Q Developing Article R Developing Article S Developing Article T Developing Article U Developing Article V Developing Article W Developing Article X Stub Y Developing Article Z

General language: Stub AlphabetArtworks known in English by a foreign title Developing Article Back-chaining Stub Colon (punctuation) Stub Commonwealth English Stub Cyrillic alphabet Developing Article English alphabet Stub Galician Developing Article Glottal stop Stub Homophone Developing Article International Phonetic Alphabet Stub Italian Stub Minimal pair Stub Nynorsk Stub Okina Stub Persian Stub Principal parts (verb) Stub Schwa

Music: Developing Article Cover version Stub Mezzo TV Stub Rock music Stub Skiffle Stub Instant Karma

Musicians: Stub Bob Dylan External Article Captain Beefheart Stub Domenico Scarlatti Stub Frederick Delius Developing Article Howlin' Wolf Stub Jean Sibelius Stub Kraftwerk External Article Leevi Madetoja Stub Ludwig van Beethoven Stub Miles Davis Stub Nico

Novelists: Stub Franz Kafka Stub Ivy Compton-Burnett Developing Article Marcel Proust

Places: Stub Burma Stub Cyprus Stub Malta

Food: Stub Crisps Developing Article Leitão assado à Bairrada Developing Article Portuguese cod casserole (bacalhau à Gomes de Sá)

Chess: Stub Chess960 Stub En passant

Time: Stub CDT Stub Universal Time

Miscellaneous: Stub Alan Odle Stub Arab Stub Ceres Stub Conchita Martinez Stub Daniel C. Dennett Stub Deutsche Mark Stub Michael Holding Stub One & Other

Thorperson

Robert Thorpe, born in London on the 100th day of the 50th year of the 20th century. I have a degree in English from Peterhouse, Cambridge. For many years I worked as a teacher of the language, in Mâcon, France; Mondovì, Italy; London, England, and finally in various locations in Portugal; I am now retired in Esposende.

>Rothorpe at Wikipedia

Ro-bot

removes Incorrect or Unnecessary Capital Letters like These. Proper capitalisation is important to distinguish the general from the particular: the Earth goes round the Sun, and if there's too much sun the earth dries out and develops cracks. Fans of different types of music often capitalise them, from jazz to jungle, a habit which may stem from referring to the names of music charts ("#51 Country", etc.). Some people capitalise the names of currencies, probably because many of them sound like proper nouns, franc, for example, or mark. Of course those two have now (almost) vacated the scene in favour of the equally capitalised-sounding euro.

I think Wikipedia's prohibition of inessential capital letters in article titles is a Very Good Thing, for two reasons: a didactic one, since there are many readers for whom English is a foreign language; and a practical one, as it serves to distinguish regular article titles from those of books, which must have title case. It saddens me that this rule is not wholeheartedly applied at Citizendium.

>CZ:What's Your Message?/World Alphabetical Time

>Spelling reform