![]() | This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|adj=on
function.
) between the "US" and the numerical portion of the abbreviation. This prevents the letters from appearing on one line and the numbers on the next if a web browser needs to put『US 51』near the end of a line.
United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Cartography by U.S. Geological Survey. Bureau of Public Roads. November 11, 1926. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
to see if it was part of the original system, and there are a handful of good sources out there that can be used to cite the 1926 date, like:
McNichol, Dan (2006). The Roads that Built America. New York: Sterling. p. 74. ISBN 1-4027-3468-9.
Weingroff, Richard F. (January 9, 2009). "From Names to Numbers: The Origins of the U.S. Numbered Highway System". Highway History. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved April 21, 2009.
|publisher=
. Rather, it should be listed in either |work=
or|newspaper=
. (It doesn't matter which is used as the parameter names are aliases and therefore equivalent.) Since the name of the city where it is published is not included in the newspaper's name, |location=
should be added. The New York Times or the Chicago Tribune would not need |location=
, but The Pantagraph does.|format=PDF
should be explicitly added anytime a linked source is a PDF. The special little icon that appears for many readers won't appear for all, and it may be removed completely at some point. (The special icons for other types of courses, like MP3s or Word documents have already been removed.)If the RD were rewritten in the proper direction,the article could be bumped to Start-Class. If an appropriate RJL table were added, it could then be C-Class. If the RD were of an appropriate length, with a History section that doesn't omit entire decades, and if the RJL had all of its mileposts, then it could be B-Class. If then the lead summarized all of the section of the article in some way and the citations were up to snuff, this article would likely pass a GA nomination. Imzadi 1979 → 15:25, 17 February 2015 (UTC)[reply]