User:ArielGlenn/Entry format

Etymology heading
If there's an Ancient Greek word in there, do this:

Since a lot of Modern Greek entries are going to need this, it's good to know.

Put the first person verb (-ω) in the etyomology, not the infinitive (-ειν). For the meaning, put "I x", not "to x" or "x". If it's a noun, put the first person masculine singular.

An example is here: eclipse

Transliteration information is here: About_Ancient_Greek

Also try to avoid putting prefixes in as a step in the etymology; if you have the complete word the prefix comes from, use that instead. (For AGr only!)

Etymology templates
Well, like standards, there are so many to choose from! So far I have found:


 * (Ancient Greek)
 * (Greek)

but then in case those weren't enough we also have



and what's pretty good is that there are about 55 words that use the Gk. template, exactly 1 that uses MGr., around 800 or so that use Gr., and around 300 that use AGr. By far most of these ought to be in AGr. and I am moving them over slowly. But the rest ought to be (if there are really any Modern Greek derivations here) in Gr. Right? Or can I roll a three-sided die to decide which of MGr., Gr. or Gk. they go in? *sigh* Gotta start moving stuff out of MGr. and Gk., I guess.

Translations
Put

Some people have put Greek, Modern; delete that. Some people use almost IPA for the transliteration; mornalize that. Frankly, about a dozen different transliteration systems have been used, no one's fault; normalize them. Most people are not using the undefined template, add it.

Only mark singular/plural as the fourth arg to t if it is plural.

Don't put the other genders for nouns or adjectives, just masculine. Exceptions: if there are other genders to nouns that aren't guessable (see entry for cat) put those. If the word with the specific meaning you want is the neuter plural, (for example) then put that form, even though that's not the canonical form. If you can put neuter singular and get away with it, do that, though.