curprev14:1814:18, 6 June 2022 134.41.65.1talk 13,706 bytes−128 Removed the line about origins, as it was unsupported by any citation, used vague language ("probably"), and appears to be contradicted by later statements about shallots being well known in Classical Greece.undo
curprev23:2623:26, 8 May 2021 ~the.one.and.the.only~talkcontribs 13,561 bytes+404 →Description and cultivation: Added a source for cals.arizona.edu for the "skin color of shallots". Keep in mind that, from a quick web search, this sentence seems to be plagiarized. I have added this source for reference, but the sentence itself needs to be rewritten from scratch. I'll let other user know in the talk page.undoTag: Visual edit
curprev18:1918:19, 22 October 2020 Citation bottalkcontribs 12,945 bytes−5 Alter: url, isbn, issue. URLs might have been internationalized/anonymized. Add: s2cid, year, location. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were actually parameter name changes. Correct ISBN10 to ISBN13. | You can use this bot yourself. Report bugs here. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:Onions | via #UCB_Category 294/315undo
curprev13:1113:11, 21 August 2020 Largoplazotalkcontribs 12,934 bytes0 Ashkelon long predates Israel. After the Canaanites it came under Philistine control, then Babylonian, then Roman, and so on. Before 1948 it can hardly have been considered to be "a city in Israel".undoTag: Manual revert
curprev00:0700:07, 16 May 2020 Largoplazotalkcontribs 12,802 bytes−302 →Asia: See WP:NOTDICTIONARY. While we're presenting different cultures' uses of shallots, there's no reason to translate the subject into an arbitrary one of their languages, even if to point out that, in the language, the subject falls into two separate categories.undoTag: Visual edit
curprev14:2614:26, 16 January 2019 Davejohnson43talkcontribs 116 bytes−12,481 ←Replaced content with 'shallots are not toys they are food. a shallot is a vegtible that you can purchase in your futuristic mobile garden.'undoTags: Replacedpossible vandalismblanking
curprev02:4502:45, 6 February 2018 Dlmackintalkcontribs m13,532 bytes−85 The note about Quebec use of "scallion" reverses the cited source: Quebecers say "scallion" for green onion and "french scallion" for scallion.undo