07:3407:34, 27 April 2024diffhist+8
History of Solomon Islands
'However, Sogavare's government was deeply corrupt and its actions led to the downward economic spiral and the deterioration of law and order.'{{fact}} Seems like the sort of thing that would be controversial and especially needs sourcing.Tag: Visual edit: Switched
18 April 2024
07:1007:10, 18 April 2024diffhist+8
Maxime Rodinson
for "moral reasons"{{fact}}. This phrase isn't in the body of the article or in the source (the Guardian) that the relevant information is sourced to.
11:2911:29, 14 April 2024diffhist+10
Linear B
about 600 years (between 1400 and 800 BC) isn't what I would call merely 'several centuries'; 'more than half a millennium' gives a better idea of the scale involved.Tag: Reverted
01:1101:11, 14 April 2024diffhist+137
The Riddle of the Labyrinth
→Synopsis: {{fact}} for the claim that women in academia were required to do more teaching and unpaid work (not found explicitly in the cited sources); added financial and class-related obstacles that *are* mentioned explicitly in one of the cited sources.
21:3621:36, 12 April 2024diffhist−670
Dom Juan
→Folkloristics: this is relevant, but it should be placed in the main article about the Don Juan legend, not about this specific play. I've added it there.Tag: section blanking
21:3521:35, 12 April 2024diffhist+670
Don Juan
A note about the folklore theme of which the story is an example (from the article about Molière's Don Juan)current
21:2821:28, 12 April 2024diffhist+488
Dom Juan
In the course of their second evening, the stone statue of the murdered man charms, deceives, and leads Dom Juan to
Hell {{quotation needed}} Much of this seems inaccurate (see hidden text) - especially 'charms' is a very strange description of the interaction.
14:1414:14, 9 April 2024diffhist+236
Etruscan language
→Core vocabulary: {{quotation needed}}<!--For the Aramaic connection - assuming that the sourcing really is for the etymology and not just for the occurrence of the word and its meaning. Of course, if unsourced, the etymology shouldn't be here at all.-->
13:3413:34, 9 April 2024diffhist−172
Land and Freedom (film)
Reading the talk page, I see that the original wording actually implied the contrary, and that the editor who changed it didn't mean to imply that either. It's probably best to avoid implying anything on this subject, as the film apparently doesn't make it clear.current
13:2413:24, 9 April 2024diffhist+150
Land and Freedom (film)
→Plot: Afterwards she performs a
raised fist salute, honoring his beliefs.{{clarify}}<!--This wording presupposes that she did not actually share or agree with his beliefs. Is such a thing actually made clear in the film?-->
12:3912:39, 9 April 2024diffhist+265
Paul Georg von Möllendorff
Möllendorff is often credited with having designed a system for romanizing the Manchu language, which was in fact the creation of his compatriot
Hans Conon von der Gabelentz.{{fact}}<!--As the table in the article
Transliteration of Manchu shows, Möllendorff's transliteration actually differs on numerous points from Gabelenz's; it seems likely that what people 'credit him with' is his own version of the system, not Gabelenz's.-->
12:3612:36, 9 April 2024diffhist+336
Transliterations of Manchu
→Transliteration in Latin script (romanization): the latter is often incorrectly credited with being the inventor of the system{{fact}}<!--As the table below shows, Möllendorff's transliteration actually differs on numerous points from Gabelenz's; it seems likely that what people mean by 'the Möllendorff system of Romanization', as Norman is quoted as calling it below, is *precisely* the set of symbols that Möllendorff did use, not the Gabelenz version.-->Tag: Visual edit: Switched