User:Panda10/Test

Etymology
From, literally: “even too much of a good thing can be harmful”.

Phrase

 * 1) too much of a good thing can be harmful, enough is as good as a feast

Pros: Compared to no etymology section at all, users don't have to make multiple clicks using the headline to find out what the elements mean.

Cons: Extra work for the editor. Too much detail, muddy appearance. The literal meaning is hiding at the end.

Etymology
lit. 'the large amount is harmful even out of a good thing'.

From.

Phrase

 * 1) too much of a good thing can be harmful, enough is as good as a feast

Pros: The literal meaning is the first line. The literal translation is closer to the original. The Hungarian elements are bolded. Less detail is provided by not separating suffixes. Cleaner appearance due to using posN instead of tN which omits the quotation marks.

Cons: Extra work for the editor.

Etymology
hu

jóból is megárt a sok

good-ELA even be.harmful-IND-PRES-3-SG the much

the much is harmful even out of a good [thing]

Phrase

 * 1) too much of a good thing can be harmful, enough is as good as a feast

Pros: Clean presentation.

Cons: Extra work for the editor. Learners may not be familiar with this style normally used by linguists. The tooltips do provide explanations and work fine on computers with a mouse but I don't know how to make them work on a mobile device with a touch screen.

Etymology
lit. 'the large amount is harmful even out of a good thing': 

Phrase

 * 1) too much of a good thing can be harmful, enough is as good as a feast

Pros: Short and clean.

Cons: Extra work for the editor. Tooltips issue for mobile devices. It is not immediately clear why the phrase is repeated (even though the individual words are underlined). It might be hard for a learner to put the phrase together because the translations are not visible at the same time.

Etymology
lit. 'the large amount is harmful even out of a good thing'.

Phrase

 * 1) too much of a good thing can be harmful, enough is as good as a feast

Pros: Phrase not repeated in the Etymology. Comments in the same place where you'd follow the links.

Cons: People might still not notice the comments. There may be other reasons why this isn't commonly done.

Etymology
lit. 'the large amount is harmful even out of a good thing'.

Phrase

 * 1) too much of a good thing can be harmful, enough is as good as a feast

Pros and cons: same as above, except (as a pro) it's easier to code