User talk:Williamclayton

Speaking of irrational or obsessive...
Containing the word-element -phobia doesn't make a term a description of a clinical psychiatric disorder. Most of these "phobia" terms are generally used to refer to societal phenomena that only edge into clinical disorders in a small subset of susceptible individuals. Your wording might fit the clinical disorders, but is wildly inappropriate for widely-held societal attitudes. Yes, these things are irrational, but all matters of emotion are irrational by definition. Treating fat-phobia and acrophobia the same is misleading and wrong. Chuck Entz (talk) 04:38, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

hwearfian
If these are quotes then please provide the sources (date, author, etc). If they are not quotes the lines should start with  and you should use. DTLHS (talk) 21:20, 11 October 2016 (UTC)

holian
Hi ! The form looks like the singular imperative form of the verb... which incidentally is not shown correctly in the template paradigm I see Leasnam (talk) 17:48, 12 December 2016 (UTC)
 * NM on the template...It's showing correctly...I wasn't looking carefully enough :) Leasnam (talk) 17:50, 12 December 2016 (UTC)

hycgan
Hi ! Some of your verb conjugations show forms from, especially in the second and third person singular. For and any of its derivatives, they should be *hygest, hygeþ. The second person is only attested as but can be normalised to hygest. Leasnam (talk) 19:08, 26 October 2017 (UTC)