User talk:205.189.94.12

Welcome!
Welcome!

Hello, and welcome to Wiktionary! We notice that you're making changes anonymously. Although this is perfectly all right, we'd like to encourage you to take the time to create an account and sign in to it when editing – it's free and easy. A number of good reasons to do so are listed at Why create an account?.

Please note that we are not Wikipedia. If you have edited there, it won't be very difficult for you to find your way here, but there are a number of differences. For example, Wiktionary is case-sensitive: Kind (German) is not the same as kind (English, Danish, Dutch etc.) Also note that Wiktionary never uses parenthetic disambiguation, so where Wikipedia might have separate articles on Mercury (planet), Mercury (element), and Mercury (mythology), Wiktionary will only have one entry on Mercury which addresses proper noun uses, and an entry on mercury which addresses regular noun uses.

Here are a few good links for newcomers:
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Questionable entries will be listed for verification, and, if they fail that process, will be deleted. Also, keep in mind our copyright policies: don't copy material from copyrighted sources here. Such additions will be deleted on sight. Submissions from IP addresses unfortunately are looked at more closely, so please take a minute to create an account.

If you have any questions, see the help pages, add a question in the appropriate discussion room or ask me on my talk page.

Enjoy your stay at Wiktionary! — justin(r)leung { (t...) 23:19, 10 November 2019 (UTC)

A few things to note
Hi, thanks for your edits so far! I just wanted to point out a few things you should keep in mind when editing: Lastly, if you're planning on editing regularly, it's highly recommended that you make an account. — justin(r)leung { (t...) 00:27, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
 * Please do not remove spaces between  or   and the text following it. It's there for readability of the code. For more information on this, please see WT:NORM.
 * For Chinese entries, we use "compounds" (at the same level as "definitions") for single-character entries and "derived terms" (usually one level below the part of speech section, at the same level as "synonyms") for multi-character entries.
 * Synonyms should usually be one level below the part of speech section.
 * We usually keep compounds that are not directly derived from the single character at single-character entries unless the page is running out of memory.