Wiktionary:About Spanish

Note 1: This guide is intended to provide guidelines both for creating Spanish entries on English Wiktionary as well as for adding Spanish translations to English words. The main guidelines for creating any entry on English Wiktionary is set forth in Entry layout explained; this page is an addition to that page, not a replacement.

Note 2: If a change occurs in the basic Wiktionary template (currently at Entry layout explained that affects Spanish entries, then that change should be reflected here.

Entry name
The name of the entry is that of the word or phrase that you are defining.

Capitalization: Spanish does not capitalize words as often as English, so the entry name will usually begin with a lowercase letter. Exceptions include many abbreviations and some proper nouns, such as names of people and countries.

Diacritics: Spanish uses two diacritics: the acute accent (á é í ó ú) and the dieresis (ü). These should always be included. Spanish speakers sometimes drop acute accents from capital letters, but at Wiktionary we always include them. Similarly, the letters n and ñ should always be distinguished.

Periods: Periods are used only in abbreviations (abreviaturas such as EE. UU.). Symbols (such as cm or $), shortenings (acortamientos such as foto) and all types of acronyms and initialims (siglas and acrónimos) don't use periods.

The essentials

 * 1) Language header lets you know the language of the word in question (==Spanish==).  It is almost always in a level two heading (See Wiktionary:How to edit a page for some basic terminology we use). When there is more than one language header on a page, the language headers should appear in alphabetical order with Translingual and English given priority. Do not use Castilian in the language header.
 * 2) Part of Speech header It is the key descriptor for the grammatical function of the term in question (such as 'noun', 'verb', etc). The definitions themselves come within its scope.  This heading is most frequently in a level three heading, and a page may have more than one for a single language.
 * 3) Headword line is the line immediately following the part of speech header.  In the simplest entries, this will be just . It is preferred to make use of the standard headword templates provided.
 * 4) Definitions or Translations of the word appear as a numbered list in the part of speech section immediately following the headword line, though it is a good idea to include a blank line in between for ease of editing.

A very simple example
This is a simple entry for the word lápiz, and shows the most fundamental elements of an article:
 * 1) the word’s language (as a level 2 heading),
 * 2) its part of speech or "type" (as a level 3 heading),
 * 3) the word itself (using the correct Part of Speech template),
 * 4) a definition (preceded by "#", which causes automatic numbering),
 * 5) and links in the definition or translation for key words.

This example can be copied and used to start an article or section of an article.

Noun

 * 1) pencil, crayon
 * 2) graphite

Preferred order of sections
The part of speech section will often include simple translation(s) into English in place of definitions, but there may be subsections.

Following is the preferred sequence for these standard sections:

==Spanish== ===Alternative forms=== ===Etymology=== ===Pronunciation=== ===Noun=== ====Usage notes==== ====Conjugation==== (Note: Only for verb entries) ====Quotations==== ====Synonyms==== ====Antonyms==== ====Derived terms==== ====Related terms==== ===See also===

Please note that the Noun header is only one possible part of speech that may appear as the header. If the entry being created is for a Spanish verb, then "Verb" should appear in place of the word "Noun" in the example above.

Etymology
If you read Spanish, a good place to get the etymology information for a word is the Spanish Royal Academy's Dictionary. If the word is a derivative using a suffix/prefix and another word you can note that as well. Examples:
 * For
 * For
 * For

Etymologies should be traced back to lemma forms whenever possible.

Pronunciation
The following accent tags can be used to distinguish between Spanish dialects:
 * Phonemic transcriptions
 * Dialects with and without z/s distinction:, ,
 * Dialects with and without ll/y distinction: ,
 * Phonetic transcriptions
 * Spain:, , , ...
 * Latin America:, , , , , , , ...
 * Latin America:, , , , , , , ...

See Spanish pronunciation for the specific IPA symbols used for Spanish phonemes and phones.

Headword line templates
Most English entries use a headword template immediately following the part of speech header. For Spanish entries, the following templates are available.

For lemma Noun entries (singular forms of nouns, not plurals [Note: It is not yet clear whether to treat the feminine form of certain male/female noun pairs (e.g. ) as its own lemma form or as a gender-inflected non-lemma form of the masculine form.]):
 * for masculine nouns
 * for feminine nouns
 * for countable nouns which have forms of both genders

For lemma Verb entries (the infinitive):
 * for all verbs

For lemma Adjective entries (usually masculine singular):
 * (see template page for information about indicating feminine and/or plural form)

For non-lemma noun, verb, and adjective entries (e.g. plurals of nouns, feminine and forms of adjectives, and verb forms that do not end in -r), may be used instead:

Some non-lemma forms may be better expressed with only the term bolded (or a template that produces such a result, such as es-verb-form), while information on the form is provided on the definition line (through a template such as es-verb form of). This is particularly helpful in verb forms, which may have multiple definitions.

Other Spanish aids

 * About Spanish/Todo
 * Category:Spanish language
 * Category:Spanish headword-line templates
 * Category:Spanish form-of templates
 * Requested entries (Spanish)
 * Appendix:Spanish pronouns