Thread:User talk:Fenakhay/Glottal stop/reply (2)

Hi,

From what I understand, the editor used U+02BE, as recommend by Wiktionary's guidelines, to represent a glottal stop (and not primary stress), and then Fenakhay replaced this character by ʔ, the "dispreferred alternative" for the glottal stop, according to Wiktionary's guidelines again.

I'm not a big fan of U+02BE because as you say it can be hard to distinguish from primary stress or from the ع. However, as a user, when I see Fenakhay's edit (and the edit summary—"What's wrong with this guy"—that I find at least surprising if not insulting, disrespectful, and offensive, unless I didn't understand something...), I wonder:
 * Should users respect these guidelines (WT:AAR)?
 * Do these guidelines apply to all Arabic dialects/varieties/languages? WT:AAR mentions dialects 8 times and colloquial 3 times and even has a section "How to add regional pronunciations" saying: " The template can be used to display pronunciations in the modern dialects of Arabic. See for example قابلة. " So I think that WT:AAR's authors assume it applies to all Arabic varieties.
 * What is the romanization scheme used by Fenakhay (I'll call it below, "Fenakhay's romanization" to simplify), can other users find it somewhere in order to understand it and/or apply it in their own contributions?
 * On which scholarly sources is this romanization based? Or is it an original work from one or several Wiktionary contributors? Sources I found for Levantine don't seem to follow Fenakhay's romanization. But the community can choose another option, that's fine.
 * Was there a debate among the community to use "Fenakhay's romanization" for Levantine Arabic instead of WT:AAR? If yes, where?
 * If there was such a debate, shouldn't we add to WT:AAR that this policy doesn't apply to Levantine Arabic and link to Wiktionary's Levantine Arabic romanization guidelines?

Because we want all Levantine entries (South and North) to use a common romanization, and because we want users (both readers and contributors) to understand Wiktionary's romanization guidelines, I think these questions are important and should be answered.

Thanks for any help you can provide.