User:Doric Loon/templates

Medieval

 * - Family name hatnote for medieval author
 * - Cite EMC

Editing

 * - add short citation - more help here: Template:Sfn
 * - group short citations
 * - add footnote xxx in conformity with short citation style


 * - add block quote to article
 * - to centre xxx on the page
 * - to centre xxx on the page, where xxx contains other templates


 * - write xxx in, , , ,
 * - to write xxx in small print


 * - to link to XXX in the German wiki


 * -to create a redirect

Problem Tagging (article head)

 * - Add header box for citation
 * - Add header box for lead
 * - Add header box for language
 * - Add multiple issues header box to group any combination of the above (take a new line for each issue).

Problem Tagging (under section header)

 * - Add header box if the section has no citations at all
 * - Add header box if the section has few citations

Problem Tagging (inline)

 * - Request sources and give standard reason (better to make this more specific if possible) - reason appears when the mouse hovers over the tag:
 * - to make a detailed request for clarification - the customized question(s) "XXX? YYY?" appear when the mouse hovers over the tag:

For more of these, see: Template:Inline cleanup tags

Editing Talk

 * - add to talkpage for viewcounter
 * - include a quotation from someone else in a talk page (appears in light blue serif font)
 * - put extended content in a foldaway box - e.g. on talk page
 * - move a talk-page discussion back to the left margin
 * - add documentation to unsigned comment
 * and - to close a discussion

Wiki Features

 * - add to a redirect to have it deleted in order to make space for accepting Draft:xxx

Wiktionary coding

 * - inherited from Middle English (into English), where xxx is the etymon and optionally yyy is the translation of this
 * - compound.
 * - cognate in German
 * - descendant in German
 * - doublet in German
 * - borrowed from German (into English)


 * Language codes: en (English), enm (Middle English), da (Danish), de (German), fr (French), fro (Old French), gmh (MHG), goh (OHG), la (Latin), nl (Dutch), sv (Swedish), xno (Anglo-Norman), yi (Yiddish).