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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Why modern, accessible English is important  





2 Examples of the obsolete  





3 Examples of undesirable new practices  





4 Counter-examples  





5 Borderline cases  





6 Notes  





7 See also  





8 External links  














Wikipedia:Use modern language







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Wikipedia Manual of Style offers a great deal of guidance on article writing. This essay explores in more depth a few points as they relate to contemporary Modern English language style versus archaic or neologistic usages, and makes some recommendations that go beyond the MOS "rules", based on actual cases encountered in Wikipedia articles.

Why modern, accessible English is important[edit]

Most Wikipedia readers are native speakers of dialects that have largely dispensed with obsolescent words and turns of phrase, while other readers have learned (or are still learning) English as a second language. It is important for these audiences that Wikipedians write articles in accessible, modern wording. Other audiences to consider are media organizations, students, bloggers, and others who may quote material from Wikipedia directly, to a more general secondary audience.

While your regional dialect may include, in daily speech and informal writing, some features of English that are considered archaic in most dialects, it is generally not a good idea to use them in Wikipedia articles, even when some of them may still be considered "proper" in some prescriptive grammar books or dictionaries, and even when writing about subjects that pertain to your region.

Likewise, the introduction of neologisms – terms and new usage patterns not (yet?) accepted into formal writing – will not help our readers.

Also, please remember that being excessively wordy, writing in a pedantic or condescending manner, or habitually using overly learned words when simpler ones will suffice, makes it more difficult to use the encyclopedia. (That said, en.wikipedia.org is not simple.wikipedia.org, and need not be "dumbed down".)

Direct quotations, of course, should always retain the original wording.

Examples of the obsolete[edit]

Some of the most obvious usages that today are too archaic or dialectal for encyclopedic use include but are not limited to:

Examples of undesirable new practices[edit]

Counter-examples[edit]

Several features of English are in various stages of slow decline (or subject to conscious attempts at change), but are still vastly preferred in formal writing, including on Wikipedia. These include but are not limited to style guide advice to:

Borderline cases[edit]

Another numeric term that was formerly common throughout English but today has almost disappeared is score (twenty). Because its survival, in only a few variants of the language, is weak at best, it most helpful to readers to avoid it on Wikipedia. Seven-night (one week) and its variously spelled contractions should not be used at all, since the term has been essentially extinct since the early 19th century. The related fortnight (two weeks) remains common in British and many Commonwealth variants, especially in business (e.g. in reference to wage and billing cycles), but is no longer current in North American and some other dialects; everyone, on the other hand, knows what "two weeks" means. Another example is treble for triple. All English readers know what triple means, but treble to many is an audio term (among various other, unrelated uses). While it remains common in sporting contexts, especially in darts and football (soccer), there's no compelling reason to use it outside such contexts even in British English. Briticisms, Americanisms, etc., should not be used just because you might be able to "get away with it" under WP:ENGVAR; Wikipedia prefers mutually-intelligible wording.

Dispute resolution: In the advent of edit-warring over the matter, generally prefer plain, internationally-understood English (e.g. two weeks) or a more common unit (kg), unless the unusual term is especially important in the context, in which case provide at first occurrence a link to an article about the term (e.g. [[fortnight]], [[Stone (mass)|stone]], or an explicit conversion, e.g. "fortnight (two weeks)", "x stone (y kg or z lb)". See WP:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers for more information.

The -ed versions are clearly understood by all English speakers, and they are less colloquial. Swelt up for swelled up is as foreign to North Americans as the U.S. Deep South dialectal equivalent, swole up, is to British, Australian, etc., readers; meanwhile, speakers of all English dialects know what swelled up means, even if that's not how they would pronounce it in their own everyday registers.

Some examples that don't form other words and are less likely to be confusing, and thus should be considered within the purview of WP:ENGVAR include spoilt for spoiled, spilt for spilled, gilt for gilded, and dwelt for dwelled (though both spellings of this last one should usually be avoided per WP:EUPHEMISM – use livedorresided). Some -t words are entirely obsolete Shakespearean English, such as wiltorwillt for willed, and should not be used here. Words for which the -ed versions are extinct are not applicable to this concern (e.g., there are no dealed, feeled, creepedorteached, so of course always use dealt, felt, crept and taught. ("Creeped" has semi-recently acquired currency in the sense of "made uneasy", as in "His actions creeped me out" or "he creeped on her by standing much too close". This is still too informal for Wikipedia, except in a direct quote.) On the other hand, some very colloquial British and American -t variants are far too obscure for usage on Wikipedia, ENGVAR notwithstanding, and do not often appear in dictionaries; some examples are holt for held and kiltorkillt for killed.

Dispute resolution: Basically, use common sense. If your article reads like some 100-year-old dude/bloke down the street wrote it at the roadhouse/pub for his buds/mates, you are making a mistake. The -t variants should not be added to articles written in American English, and while it is grammatically permissible and arguably helpful for our general readership to replace often obscure -t variants with standard -ed versions even in British and other Commonwealth dialect articles, if any edit-warring results, just drop the matter and leave the -t spelling.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ See the WP:BIRDCON RfC result, which ended an eight-year dispute about capitalization of the common names of species.
  • ^ See the WP:BREEDCAPSRFC result, which established that Wikipedia does capitalize the names of standardized breeds.
    1. ^ Example: Louis, Tristan L. (December 4, 2011). "Interop: the future of hardware". TNL.net. self-published. Retrieved 2011-12-05. All of a sudden, the TV screen would become a giant web browser in full screen mode, allowing to not only access any content on cable or broadcast TV but also any content available on the internet.
  • ^ Orwell, George (April 1946). "Politics and the English Language". Horizon. 13 (76): 252–265). Objective consideration of contemporary phenomena compels the conclusion that success or failure in competitive activities exhibits no tendency to be commensurate with innate capacity, but that a considerable element of the unpredictable must invariably be taken into account. Republished online in Fifty Orwell Essays, Project Gutenberg Australia, 2003.
  • See also[edit]

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Use_modern_language&oldid=1170439125"

    Categories: 
    Wikipedia essays about style
    Wikipedia essays about editing
    Wikipedia essays
     



    This page was last edited on 15 August 2023, at 01:49 (UTC).

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