User:Sarri.greek/notes

Liddell-Scott
Problems at editions of Liddell-Scott.

, which λέγω? & the ety of at older versions of Liddell-Scott. Some older Greek dictionaries copy a mistake of pre-1940 editions with an incorrect sense "I put someone to sleep" for λέγω.

Was λέγω1 a typographic error of  (similar content)? Or was it a wrong etymology? It was a wrong etymology. [also cf wikt:en:Talk:λέσχη, ety.links at wikt:el:Συζήτηση:λέσχη].Compare: [ the Middle Liddell as in https://logeion.uchicago.edu/λέγω with no λέγω1 to λέγω1@perseus.tufts.edu & λέγω2@perseus.tufts.edu ]

I little different in of 1940, but still with λέγω.a. [ Compare the LSJ as in https://logeion.uchicago.edu/λέγω with no λέγω(A) to λέγω(A)@perseus.tufts.edu ''A.lay, pres. erroneously inferred from λέξομαι, ἔλεκτο, etc.; v. λέχομαι.'' & λέγω(B)@perseus.tufts.edu ]

Wwe see the mistake λέγω="I put someone to sleep" at
 * Dictionary Λίντελ-Σκοτ, Greek translation of, online @greek-language.gr Mistakes are copied from the printed#LSK based on  of 1889
 * lemma λέγω has A, B, C senses, but λέγω.Α like λέχω (see identical content at Bailly2020 as in )
 * lemma λέσχη connects to λέγω.C. (Ι talk), which is wrong [there is no such info in any dictionary], when probably they meant λέγω.Α. = the correct is λέχω. (or it is just a mistaken ety)
 * correct ety here
 * Dictionary LSK Λίντελ-Σκοτ-Κωνσταντινίδης [Liddell-Scott-Konstantinidis] printed Greek translation + suppl. / Online = the above #Λίντελ
 * lemma λέγω, with mistake λέγω.Α. pdf.0021, volC should be λέχω cf
 * lemma λέσχη, with mistake at ety pdf.0031, volC cf
 * correct ety here
 * Stamatakos 1972 ανατύπωση 1999 notes, page 574, that the etymology of λέσχη from λέγω (a place for talking) is not accepted unanimously

etychain

 * Proposal Module:etymon Etymological trees, designed by Ioaxxere, Votes/2024-04/Allowing etymology trees on entries
 * Talks: Beer_parlour/2024/March, repl. Benwing2 et al.
 * Beer_parlour/2024/March
 * Beer_parlour/2024/March

The problem: Put a lemma in ALL the etymological categories of ALL its ancestors, when its actual Etymology states only ONE immediate step. All the others are written at THEIR lemmata. At the moment (2024), this is done by hand with template and  manually. The problem is, that the editor might be unaware of all the ancestors' etymologies.

Proposal Make repository of etychains. Assumed: Etychain is the reverse sequence of 'descwrite' (or, descwrite is produced automatically as the reverse of etychain)
 * Etychains are multipositional categorising templates. They put in Categories every lemma which is included in an etychain.
 * No need of in every lemma of every language.
 * 1 Principle "do not repeat information".
 * 2 Principle "says who". refs for every step of etymology.
 * 3 There is a repository of etychains
 * template {etychain|1=about this word|2, 3, ... ety steps}
 * template {descrite|1=about this word|2=descendant} Write at Descendants. If section or lang.Sector do not exist, open them. The Descendants full tree appears at the 1st donor. Elsewhere: see at...

Etychains are not intended for morphological categorizations. word-creation.morphological analysis and surface.morphological analysis produce different Categories. Examples for etychain multipositional etymology Categories 1. At page aaa editor writes Etymology < {bor|el|fr|fff} < {der|el|la|lala}. Getting messages: Or, ... if this is not possible, gets the message:
 * fff Etymology already exists or please update it.
 * aaa, fff etychain does not exist. Please write it.
 * Please update etymologies and etychains for the languages in this Etymology.

_a. Administrator stops the Etymology at step 1 (moves {der|el|la|lala} and its ref at fff page). _b. Updates pages fff and lala. _c. etychain is written: This:
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms borrowed from French
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms derived from French
 * {descwrite|fr:fff|el:aaa:bor} = Go to fff#French, open Descendants if not exist and write it.

2. Page fff gets Etymology {inh|fr|frm|mmm} < {der|fr|la|lala}. Getting messages: Updating etychain as: This updates Categories for ALL members:
 * mmm Etymology does not exist. Please write it.
 * fff, lala, exist at etychain repository. Please update.
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms borrowed from French
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms derived from French
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms derived from Middle French
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms derived from Latin
 * puts aaa at Cat:Greek terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
 * puts fff at Cat:French terms inherited from Middle French
 * puts fff at Cat:French terms derived from Middle French
 * puts fff at Cat:French terms derived from Latin
 * puts fff at Cat:French terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
 * puts mmm at Cat:Middle French terms derived from Latin
 * puts mmm at Cat:Middle French terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
 * puts lala at Cat:Latin terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
 * adds all the {descwrite|ine-pro:xx|la:lala} {descwrite|la:lala|frm:mmm} {descwrite|frm:mmm|fr:fff:inh}... etc

3. But someone adds at Etymology of lala < {inh|la|itc-pro|iii}. Getting messages
 * iii Etymology does not exist. Please write it.
 * lala, exist at etychain repository. Please update.
 * for every step, will be added: XX terms derived from Proto-Italic
 * {descwrite}s will also be automatically updated. The desctree full appears at the ine-pro page.

Reference templates
The naming e.g. Category:Ancient Greek reference templates should have been, more accurately [?? renaming]
 * Category:Reference templates by language e.g. en :: grc :: gkm :: el
 * Category:Reference templates for Ancient Greek

naming the lemma language, not the exit.language of translations and interpretations, which can be in any language. As it is now, it implies that the reference sources are ancient (sometimes, they are).

References (and quotation-references) inform the reader of where we found information or any text. It is the only way for readers to check the credibility of the information. To make sure that we have not 'made it up'. In rare cases where en.wiktionary is responsible for a crucial piece of information (etymology, a rare sense), this must be marked visibly. [?? verification] A citation or quotation-ref may be used: The house style of en.wiktionary is [?? verification. Are cite- and quote templates designed for specific Style?? ] Wikipedias, unfortunately, use a mixture of various styles like MLA, APA and others (w:en:Wikipedia:Citing_sources).
 * exactly after the piece of information/text - with tags
 * or at a "Further reading" or any other list of references and sources.
 * for refs (of dictionaries), APA style.w . But we write the full given name of an author if possible instead of initials.
 * (Surname, Given name. (0000). Work. City:Publisher.)
 * Also, we often place lemma or lemma.link at the begining (see and all Templates at Category:Ancient Greek reference templates)
 * for quotations and Quotation templates: MLA stylew
 * (Given name Surname, Work, City:Publisher, 0000.)
 * [??or mixed styles?? verification].

We avoid break-lines. The Style Guides for printed books, have hyphens and spaces which would be better avoided at internet pages. It can be done with special characters, or it can be done with easy-solution.
 * dates 2000-03-31 Easy nobreak: 2000.03.31.
 * page (space) 31. Easy nobreak: p.31. (no space)
 * ISBN: (space) ...OOO-OO-OOO with hyphens, cannot be helped, Unfortunately, template (nobreak) does not take care of hyphens. If &#38;x8209; is used (no-breaking hyphen) the ISBN will not be functional.

About en.wikt house rules, see:
 * References
 * Reference templates
 * Referencing dictionaries
 * Category:Reference templates
 * Quotations
 * Help:Citations and references
 * Help:Footnotes
 * terms: reference, citation, bibliography, footnote, annotation, scholium/scholion, Sch., scholia, Sch.Vet (vetera), Sch.Rec. (recentiora), marginalia, cod., codd., s.v., v.l., f.l., ibid. apud
 * for abbreviations of dictionaries, see el.wikt??
 * for classics Abbreviations at Oxford Classical Dictionary, 4th Edition.

Lemma and pagenumber
For our citations we need to inform the reader about our dictionary-source for At most reference templates (example: Cat:Ancient Greek reference templates), en.wiktionary places the lemma&#8209;link at the beginning of the citation, unlike the style in printed media, placing it at the end of data. Principle: "Put first to click immediately." At our data&#8209;description of the book/dictionary many links are included for author, work, etc. If our lemma&#8209;link were placed at the end, readers would have to go through many links to reach the lemma link. The pagenumber, on the other hand, is avoided whenever the lemma or text is found without difficulty (e.g. via section &sect;). It is needed when pagination might differ from edition to edition and there is no other way to find it. Especially for a...z entires of dictionaries, pagenumber is not needed.
 * the lemma (entry) of a dictionary. It must always be mentioned or linked if different from our pagename.
 * and/or the pagenumber where we found it, and/or the chapter of a book, and/or a volume of a dictionary, of a book (perhaps at some platform)

IF text is mentioned (Prefaces, or other notes), we place its pagenumber at the end of data, sometimes at a line below.

How can we do it?
 * With templates   if it is a citation
 * or the equivalents    or simple  if there is text quoted at a quotation.
 * Manually, with a simple text of the data-description of our source.
 * Or, make a new Template for our ref, if it is going to be used many times.

No link

 * with
 * optionally show page or pages, placed at the end: parameter |page= |pages=
 * optionally show lemma, placed at the end: parameter |entry=
 * or simple text
 * preferably show lemma or pagename and/or pagenumber(s) placed at the begnning, to be similar with the rest of the referneces in our reflist
 * Here, the named parameters may also be numbered (since we only "show| but we do not "link"). +space after it

Examples
 * as in 2024 with showing lemma= (optionally pagename) Also, with brief instructions
 * as in 2024 Example at ωρίμανση.2024

Link lemma
Link lemma or pagename a.automatically or b.manually + show or not show a pagenumber. Here,
 * lemma word = the PAGENAME or a different parameter (numbered or named) is the choice or other word
 * the numbered parameters are links (for 1 for lemma, optionally 2 for pagename)
 * the named parameters are to "show" a different word instead of the lemma-or-pagename.

Automatically: pagename. Change it with 1st position |1=. Change what is shown with |lemma= [https://... ] says [ open link If position#1 is added link 1 else, link PAGENAME If position#2 or lemma= or entry= is added show it, else show 1. If that is not added, show PAGENAME. ] close link

Examples
 * , place as url=, after the first data (name, year) (the 'ugly-hacks used, is = )
 * R:grc:Hofmann.2018
 * |pageurl= to archive.org
 * R:el:Hatzidakis:1893.2022
 * with switch: R:grc:Frisk.2018
 * other: with auto-link, optional page or pages as in 2024 - doc 2024

what is ugly hacks?
Many en.wikt ref templates have this: what is ugly hacks? In reference Templates we find: This, calls Module:ugly hacks, function "match" It says, translated in wikitext: [{{#if:{{{1|}}}|{{{1|}}}|{{PAGENAME}} p.{{#if:{{{2|}}}|{{{2|}}}|{{#if:{{{1|}}}|{{{1|}}}|{{PAGENAME}}}}}}]
 * It is placed at Module:ugly hacks, see function "match"
 * what does it say? whatttt are these nubmers?

in detail....{{#if:{{{1|}}}|{{{1|}}}|{{PAGENAME}}}}{{#if:{{{2|}}}|{{{2|}}}|{{#if:{{{1|}}}|{{{1|}}}|{{2|}}}}}<!-- close if2

urlencode
A lemma-link: [linkuurl show.page.or.lemma] When do I need urlencode? Does it create problems? [xxxx p.] or [xxxx p.]
 * urlencode is a magic word, that replaces spaces and fonts to %... (per cent symbols)

Link manually
For some sources, it is difficult for templates to provide automatic links. The assistance of the editor is needed. S/he must find the pagenumber or the id of a lemma and add it manually. Examples:
 * For template it would be possible but very difficult to make automatic links for each lemma of the 8,000 plus pages of the dictionary. Editor must find the pagenumber from pdfs (available from the linked sources)
 * Examples of dictionaries with provided auto-links lemma by lemma or page by page:
 * For almost all the id numbers for each of its entries is added at Module:R:LBG/data of the Module:R:LBG
 * For the Greek translation of LSJ (Liddell-Scott-Jones Ancient Greek dictionary, wikt:el:Template:R:LSK) the students of Mathematics at the University of Aegean have provided the scanned page for any lemma if one types Greek letters at the SearchBox
 * https://myria.math.aegean.gr/lds/web/index-en.php
 * example https://myria.math.aegean.gr/lds/web/view.php

Kinds of linked references

 * with manual lemma only (for a...z dictionaries) or section/chapter only (for texts)
 * with manual pagenumber only (optionally a manual or automatic lemma word)
 * with pagenumber and lemma, both manually
 * with volume and pagenumber (and optionally, lemma)
 * manually: editor has to write volumenumber  AND pagenumber
 * volume number provided automatically through page-intervals created for each volume
 * (e.g. vol.1 has pages 1&#8209;98, vol.2 has pages 99&#8209;203, ...)
 * from Templates with  search insource:/switch/ intitle:/R\:/
 * 2 volumes, entry at as in 2023
 * volumes and parts of volumes at as in 2024
 * elaborate: as in 2022
 * from Templates with Template:interval < Module:interval -  search
 * 2 volumes, continuous pagenumbers & V(view)link as in 2024
 * Many volumes! & editions as in 2024
 * for Codex as in 2024
 * plus 2nd link: (Pokorny) as in 2023, example at canis.2024 (at a double section Ref)

Extra parameters
Often, I add additional parameters Examples:
 * or
 * Useful for presenting multiple links for the same dictionary/book.
 * Also, at Talk pages, where we do not want the long data description.
 * or
 * Useful for lists, presenting only the data-description of the dictionry/book/platform as at Appendices, and source-lists.
 * as in 2023


 * We also add at the end of data-description the
 * Useful, if editor wants to add a comma and notes

V view
At wikipedias, we often see V&bull;T&bull;E Example: w:en:Template:Greece topics Although wiktionaries do not use this V&bull;T&bull;E marking (as in 2023), we would often like the reader to see more details about a reference, or fascilitate editor's job, with a link to the Template. I have added to some Templates the V, linking to the Template with tooltip: View template for details!
 * V = View the template.
 * T = Talk. Go to the Discussion page of the template.
 * E = Edit the template.

Examples
 * as in 2024

Terms
Lexicographical terms from Greek to English, difficult to translate, or Greek-specific (not found at English dictionaries).


 * αρχ. αρχαίος αρχαϊκός αρχαιότροπος English - Greek differences
 * archaic αρχαϊκός - archaistic αρχαιότροπος.
 * archaic = a phase before classic or main phase of an ancient period
 * archaic label for a modern language =
 * archaic lable for e.g. Ancient Greek =
 * archaistic = in the fashion of ancient, imitating an ancient (not an archaic) word
 * διαχρονικό δάνειο diachronic borrowing: From an older period of the same language. The term used at (expalained at the Greek Intro). Revived or reactivated term use at Intro of words Examples: el, en
 * εσωτερικό δάνειο internal borrowing: Borrowing from the same language, cf διαχρονικό & cf συγχρονικό
 * μεταγενέστερη = cf Κοινή
 * Κοινή Koine Greek marked as 'Later (language)' at dictionaries:
 * μτγν. = el = el-kth
 * = German >   at  -  Pape abbreviations
 * Sp Spätere, Die Zeitbestimmung ergibt entweder der Zusammenhang, oder es sind die Alexandriner und die folgenden Schriftsteller gemeint.
 * sp Spätere, Die Zeitbestimmung ergibt entweder der Zusammenhang, oder es sind die Alexandriner und die folgenden Schriftsteller gemeint.
 * sp.D = Spätere Dichter. Die Zeitbestimmung ergibt entweder der Zusammenhang, oder es sind die Alexandriner und die folgenden Schriftsteller gemeint.
 * < =  in the style of . The difference: λαϊκότροπο is used in Standard, also by learned speakers. But λαϊκό is not. Example:
 * < = literally: of the people. Of the masses. Of the lower classes. Non-learned. See λαϊκότροπο (for difference)
 * συγχρονικό δάνειο synchronic borrowing From a dialect or idiom οφ the same period of the language, it enter Standard. Examples: but for males  has remained dialectal, and did not enter koine (Standard).

TOC

 * ToC@mediawiki + more links

Design for wiktionaries, not wikipedias. e.g. for en.wiktionary. Are there progammers at en.wikt who could recreate the magic word  for the needs of a multisectional page? [ notifying MM. Benwing2, This, that and the other ]
 * also discussed with WMF staff at wikt:el:Βικιλεξικό:Βικιδημία/2023Vector (about lack of _TOC_ at new skins).

Precise link en
Question at Beer_parlour/2024/February: When do we need precise link with to   instead of common to#top.link   ?

(when does a precise link to host language is needed?)

1) When there is a Translingual sector above English sector.

Too many L2
2) When the ToC is tooooo long. Solutions:
 * 2a. as in 1)
 * 2b plus/or Design ToCs for multilingual dictionary with many L2 (level2) titles for languages.

TOC hor limit2

 * wikt:en:Template:User:Sarri.greek/toc2-hor Can someone make it horizontal??? some bullet in between too?

If more than ... languages then use TOC.horizontal.toclimit2, otherwise we get ridiculously long vertical ToCs.
 * example: lemma A currently (2024.02.) with 230 languages (and many others like te, [do]] hide/show as in french wiktionary (compare
 * https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/do?useskin=vector
 * to French https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/do?useskin=vector (much nicer)
 * Spanish: https://es.wiktionary.org/wiki/do?useskin=vector

Desired output verical, because that is how people read (not broken columns):

Contents with full stops and bullets? 1.Translingual &bull; 2.English &bull; 3.Acehnese &bull; 4.Acheron &bull; 5.Adzera &bull; 6.Afar &bull; 7.Afrikaans &bull; 8.Albanian &bull; 9.Alekano &bull; 10.Alemannic German &bull; 11.Aleut &bull; 12.Amaimon &bull; 13.Amarasi &bull; 14.Ambrak &bull; 15.Anal &bull; 16.Angami &bull; 17.Ankave &bull; 18.Anuki &bull; 19.Araki &bull; 20.Aromanian &bull; 21.Ashéninka Pajonal &bull; 22.Assiniboine &bull; 23.Atsahuaca &bull; 24.Auhelawa &bull; 25.Avokaya &bull; 26.Awara &bull; 27.Azerbaijani &bull; 28.Balanta-Kentohe &bull; 29.Barai &bull; 30.Bari &bull; 31.Basque &bull; 32.Bavarian &bull; 33.Beja &bull; 34.Bemba &bull; 35.Blagar &bull; 36.Blin &bull; 37.Brahui &bull; 38.Breton &bull; 39.Busa &bull; 40.Catalan &bull; 41.Central Franconian &bull; 42.Ch'orti' &bull; 43.Chachi &bull; 44.Chamorro &bull; 45.Chechen &bull; 46.Cheyenne &bull; 47.Chinese &bull; 48.Chiwere &bull; 49.Choctaw &bull; 50.Cofán &bull; 51.Comanche &bull; 52.Comox &bull; 53.Corsican &bull; 54.Crimean Tatar &bull; 55.Cypriot Arabic &bull; 56.Czech &bull; 57.Dagbani &bull; 58.Danish &bull; 59.Dinka &bull; 60.Domari &bull; 61.Dutch &bull; 62.Duun &bull; 63.Egyptian &bull; 64.Elfdalian &bull; 65.Esan &bull; 66.Esperanto &bull; 67.Estonian &bull; 68.Ewe &bull; 69.Faroese &bull; 70.Fe'fe' &bull; 71.Fijian &bull; 72.Finnish &bull; 73.Fon &bull; 74.French &bull; 75.Friulian &bull; 76.Fula &bull; 77.Ga &bull; 78.Gagauz &bull; 79.Galician &bull; 80.German &bull; 81.Gilbertese &bull; 82.Gimi (Goroka) &bull; 83.Greenlandic &bull; 84.Haida &bull; 85.Haitian Creole &bull; 86.Halkomelem &bull; 87.Hausa &bull; 88.Hawaiian &bull; 89.Hungarian &bull; 90.Hunsrik &bull; 91.Hupa &bull; 92.Icelandic &bull; 93.Ido &bull; 94.Igbo &bull; 95.Inari Sami &bull; 96.Indonesian &bull; 97.Ingrian &bull; 98.Interlingua &bull; 99.Inupiaq &bull; 100.Irish &bull; 101.Italian &bull; 102.Jarai &bull; 103.Juǀ'hoan &bull; 104.Kabyle &bull; 105.Kaingang &bull; 106.Kakabai &bull; 107.Kalo Finnish Romani &bull; 108.Kanuri &bull; 109.Karakalpak &bull; 110.Karelian &bull; 111.Kari'na &bull; 112.Kashaya &bull; 113.Kashubian &bull; 114.Kawésqar &bull; 115.Khakas &bull; 116.Kikuyu &bull; 117.Kobon &bull; 118.Krio &bull; 119.Kwak'wala &bull; 120.Lakota &bull; 121.Latgalian &bull; 122.Latin &bull; 123.Latvian &bull; 124.Lingala &bull; 125.Lithuanian &bull; 126.Livonian &bull; 127.Lou &bull; 128.Lower Sorbian &bull; 129.Luxembourgish &bull; 130.Malagasy &bull; 131.Malay &bull; 132.Maltese &bull; 133.Mampruli &bull; 134.Mankanya &bull; 135.Manx &bull; 136.Maori &bull; 137.Mapudungun &bull; 138.Marba &bull; 139.Marshallese &bull; 140.Maskelynes &bull; 141.Massachusett &bull; 142.Mayoyao Ifugao &bull; 143.Mecayapan Nahuatl &bull; 144.Mohawk &bull; 145.Moore &bull; 146.Muinane &bull; 147.Muong &bull; 148.Nauruan &bull; 149.Navajo &bull; 150.Nisga'a &bull; 151.Noon &bull; 152.Nootka &bull; 153.Northern Kurdish &bull; 154.Northern Sami &bull; 155.Norwegian Bokmål &bull; 156.Norwegian Nynorsk &bull; 157.Nuer &bull; 158.Nupe &bull; 159.O'odham &bull; 160.Occitan &bull; 161.Okanagan &bull; 162.Paraguayan Guaraní &bull; 163.Plautdietsch &bull; 164.Polish &bull; 165.Portuguese &bull; 166.Q'eqchi &bull; 167.Rohingya &bull; 168.Romani &bull; 169.Romanian &bull; 170.Ronga &bull; 171.Rotokas &bull; 172.Rotuman &bull; 173.Saafi-Saafi &bull; 174.Saanich &bull; 175.Samoan &bull; 176.Samogitian &bull; 177.Sango &bull; 178.Scots &bull; 179.Scottish Gaelic &bull; 180.Serbo-Croatian &bull; 181.Serer &bull; 182.Seri &bull; 183.Shilluk &bull; 184.Shona &bull; 185.Silesian &bull; 186.Skolt Sami &bull; 187.Slovak &bull; 188.Slovene &bull; 189.Somali &bull; 190.Southern Sami &bull; 191.Spanish &bull; 192.Squamish &bull; 193.Swedish &bull; 194.Tagalog &bull; 195.Tahitian &bull; 196.Tatar &bull; 197.Tetum &bull; 198.Tigon Mbembe &bull; 199.Tlingit &bull; 200.Tongan &bull; 201.Tonkawa &bull; 202.Tuareg &bull; 203.Tundra Nenets &bull; 204.Turkish &bull; 205.Turkmen &bull; 206.Tyap &bull; 207.Ubykh &bull; 208.Udihe &bull; 209.Upper Sorbian &bull; 210.Uzbek &bull; 211.Venda &bull; 212.Veps &bull; 213.Vietnamese &bull; 214.Vilamovian &bull; 215.Volapük &bull; 216.Võro &bull; 217.Votic &bull; 218.Wakhi &bull; 219.Walloon &bull; 220.Welsh &bull; 221.West Frisian &bull; 222.Winnebago &bull; 223.Xârâcùù &bull; 224.Xhosa &bull; 225.Yámana &bull; 226.Yele &bull; 227.Yoruba &bull; 228.Zarma &bull; 229.Zazaki &bull; 230.Zulu

TOC ver hor

 * As in the Chinese (parle, table), Italian (parle) Vientamese (table) wiktionaries vertical by L2, with L3 horizontal e.g.

1. English - 1.1. Etymology 1.2. Pronunciation 1.3. Adverb 1.4. References 2. French - 2.1. Etymology 2.2. Pronunciation 2.4. Adverb 2.4. Usage notes 2.5. Further reading and so on

TOC hor ver

 * Or the horizontal L2 with vertical L3 especially nice for juxtaposed phases of same lang. Test at wikt:en:User:Sarri.greek/lab/test1

(example as in lemma σκληρός) - el.wikt.test wikt:el:Module:toc-test wikt:el:Template:toc-test, examples of how it looks at wikt:el:Template:test-ol

Needed number 2. 2.1. etc Fully numbered

Also see tests at wikt:el:Βικιλεξικό:Βικιδημία/2023Vector/testSarri
 * TOC test @βασίλισσα.2024 (at bottom, to avoide jumping lines when linking to an anchor).

