User:ThaesOfereode/To-do list

Edit

 * Hell in Catholicism
 * In an absolutely outrageous state
 * Ukhtpechlag
 * transliteration, expand body
 * Orthodoxy
 * source, expand body
 * Bill Chong
 * ce, source
 * Tsendiin Damdinsüren
 * source, expand body
 * History of the Calvinist–Arminian debate
 * source; should be easy dunks
 * Catholic emancipation
 * source; should be easy dunks
 * The Servile State
 * finish draft, expand body
 * The Cost of Discipleship
 * source, expand body
 * Piedmontese language
 * add sources, restructure, add content
 * Sebastià Juan Arbó
 * source from Catalan, add infobox, expand content
 * Juan Soldado
 * source, expand examples of veneration and visitations
 * Doctrine of the two swords
 * expand
 * *Kóryos
 * review, if not fix
 * Michael Norris (politician)
 * fix citing, integrate AGF link
 * Secret Rendezvous (novel)
 * maybe read and improve plot?

Create

 * Schmidt–Hackstein's law
 * Schmidt–Hackstein's law is a Proto-Indo-European sound law that causes laryngeal sounds to be deleted in certain contexts. In short, when a laryngeal sound is preceded by a consonant at the end of a syllable and followed by a consonant cluster, the laryngeal is dropped altogether. The law is named after Gernot Schmidt, a German linguist who first described the law in 1973 and applied it to Proto-Indo-Iranian, and Olav Hackstein, a German linguist who demonstrated its presence in the earlier Proto-Indo-European language in 2002.
 * Despair (theology)
 * Martin Joachim Kümmel
 * Andrija Matijaš Pauk
 * Joseph Pohle
 * Polar Museum, Tromsø
 * Farewell to Dong Da (check notability guidelines?)
 * Farewell to Dong Da is a poem written by Gao Shi. Composed during the Tang Dynasty, the poem is a reflection of friendship and goodwill.
 * Gerardus Vrolik
 * Economics for Helen
 * Book itself
 * A 1924 review by Helene Reynard
 * A 1925 review by James Edward Le Rossignol
 * An Essay on the Restoration of Property, sometimes referred to simply as The Restoration of Property
 * Book itself
 * Manning influenced the book.
 * Europe and the Faith
 * "Mr. Belloc, Historian"
 * "However, Europe and the Faith was too vehement a statement to make converts; but the mere fact that the entrenched position had been attacked led others to look into the matter."
 * "Many did not accept his particular way of supporting his conclusions—his philological evidence was looked as askance—but the fact is that Mr. Belloc was a major factor in killing the absurd Teutonic legend of the late 19th century historian, a legend that nowadays reads like a parody of itself, in the pages of J. R. Green."
 * Lloyd Ross
 * Australian Dictionary of Biography
 * Concupiscible and irascible passions
 * Grande munus


 * Ephrem Lash
 * Ethical dative
 * The ethical dative is a form of the dative case used to indicate personal interest, involvement, or concern. It is found across the world's languages, including Spanish, Hebrew, Russian, and in archaic English.
 * "The diachronic of the so-called 'ethical dative
 * Occurs in Biblical Hebrew, Modern Hebrew, Aramaic, "other Semitic languages", Spanish, Polish, possibly Akkadian, and others.
 * Appears to develop from the following function:
 * allative > dative > benefactive > reflexive-benefactive > ethical dative
 * Givón disputes the "theoretical validity of the notion grammaticalization chain" with examples from Tamil, but the chain appears to work with Biblical Hebrew, Spanish, and possibly Akkadian.
 * Spanish
 * "ED construction endows intransitive verbs with a sense of either sudden departure or sudden change
 * Luego fue a la casa. = "Then she went to the house."
 * Luego se fue. = "Then she took off."
 * Dicen que murió ayer. = "They say he died yesterday.", where emphasis is on "yesterday".
 * Dicen que se murió. = "They say he died.", where emphasis is on the new information of the death
 * "To a transitive verb, the ED construction imparts a sense of completion or perfectivity
 * Lo comió muy lento. = "He ate it very slowly.", with eating presupposed and emphasis on its slowness
 * Se lo comió. = "He ate it all up."
 * Biblical Hebrew
 * Relatively rare
 * Appears to only occur with "intransitive motion verbs"
 * From Genesis 12: א וַיֹּאמֶר יְהוָה אֶל-אַבְרָם, לֶךְ-לְךָ מֵאַרְצְךָ וּמִמּוֹלַדְתְּךָ וּמִבֵּית אָבִיךָ, אֶל-הָאָרֶץ, אֲשֶׁר אַרְאֶךָּ
 * Dialog (journal)
 * Charles Cary (physician)
 * Ivo Frangeš
 * Milivoj Šrepel
 * Dragutin Albrecht (tiskar)
 * Josip Baričević
 * Ivan Perkovac
 * The Spiritual Combat
 * Alfred von Berger
 * Bay Faction
 * Bay Faction (album)
 * Cyberbully Mom Club (notable?)
 * Theodor Mayerhofer
 * François Desset
 * Thomas H. Wiggans

Drafts

 * Draft:Choi Afock

Deletion

 * A'bunadh – probably not notable; only scotch with its own page but not otherwise noteworthy
 * William Smoot – not notable in the slightest

Miscellaneous

 * I don't know where it's going to go, but it's gonna go somewhere.
 * "One story tells of him encountering a man in a railroad carriage reading his History of England. Asking the man what he paid for the book, Belloc fished the sum out of his pocket, gave it to the man, snatched the book away and flung it out the carriage window."

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