Template:derived/documentation

This template is used to format the etymology of terms derived from another language. it combines the functions of and  into a single template, with fewer keystrokes and without writing out the language codes twice.

Wherever possible, please use or. Please only use it under the header 'Etymology'.

When to use
This template is a "catch-all" that is used when neither nor  is applicable. This includes the following situations:


 * A term was created in an ancestor, using parts from an even older ancestor. For example, English inherited a term from Proto-Germanic, but the term did not exist in Proto-Indo-European and was created in the separate history of Proto-Germanic. In this case, you'd use for the Proto-Indo-European term. This includes roots; roots are generally not inherited, but are used to form words and are hence not direct ancestors. For terms derived from roots rather than fully-formed words, you should use.


 * A term was borrowed from another language, and that term was inherited or borrowed from a third language. For example, English borrowed a term from Latin, which in turn borrowed it from Ancient Greek or inherited it from Proto-Italic. In this case, you'd use for the Ancient Greek or Proto-Italic term.

For terms that are confirmed as inherited or borrowed, please change  to   or   accordingly.

Parameters

 * 1
 * The language code (see List of languages) of the language which derived the term, which should be the language of the section that the template is placed in.


 * 2
 * The language code of the language which the term was derived from.


 * 3
 * The term in the source language that this term was derived from. If empty, generates a term request ([Term?]) and places the entry in a term request category, except in some cases like derivations from families or substrates. To override this and disable the term request, use "-".


 * 4 or alt
 * An alternative display form to show for the term, see and.


 * t
 * A gloss or translation for the term, see and.


 * 5 or gloss
 * Aliases of t.


 * tr
 * A transliteration for the term, see and.


 * pos
 * A part of speech indication for the term, see and.


 * g, g2, g3 and so on
 * Gender and number, as in and ; see Module:gender and number for details.


 * lit
 * A literal translation for the term, see and.


 * id
 * A sense id for the term, see and.


 * sc
 * Script code to use. The template can usually figure out the correct code, so this is rarely needed. When no code is given, the template will try to detect the script based on the characters of the word, and if it fails to detect the script, the code  will be used.


 * sort
 * Sort key. Not normally needed.


 * 1
 * Suppress categorization.

TemplateData
{	"params": { "1": {			"label": "term language", "description": "The language code (see Wiktionary:Languages) of the language which derived the term, which should be the language of the section that the template is placed in.", "example": "en", "type": "string", "required": true },		"2": {			"label": "derived from language", "description": "The language code of the language which the term was derived from.", "example": "fr", "type": "string", "required": true },		"3": {			"label": "term", "description": "The term in the source language that this term was derived from. If empty, generates a term request ([Term?]) and places the entry in a term request category, except in some cases like derivations from families or substrates. To override this and disable the term request, use \"-\".", "example": "casa", "type": "wiki-page-name", "required": true },		"4": {			"aliases": [ "alt" ],			"label": "alternative display", "description": "An alternative display form to show for the term", "type": "string" },		"tr": { "label": "transliteration", "description": " A transliteration for the term", "type": "string" },		"id": { "label": "sense id", "description": "A sense id for the term", "example": "house", "type": "string" }	},	"description": "This template is used to format the etymology of terms derived from another language. it combines the functions of and  into a single template, with fewer keystrokes and without writing out the language codes twice.\nWherever possible, please use  or . Please only use it under the header 'Etymology'.\n", "format": "inline" }

tr:Şablon:türetilmiş