User talk:Lelvis2

Change From A churro (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtʃuro], Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈʃuʁu]) is a fried-dough pastry—predominantly choux—based snack. Churros are traditional in Spain and Portugal - from where they originate - as well as the Philippines and Ibero-America. They are also consumed in the Southwestern United States, France and other areas that have received immigration from Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries. In Spain, churros can either be thin (and sometimes knotted) or long and thick, where they are known as porras in some regions. They are normally eaten for breakfast dipped in champurrado, hot chocolate, dulce de leche or café con leche. Sugar is often sprinkled on top.

PLEASE CHANGE TO:

A churro (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtʃuro], Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈʃuʁu]) is a fried-dough pastry—predominantly choux—based snack. Churros are traditional in Spain and Portugal - from where they originate - as well as Latin-America and the Philippinnes. They are also consumed in the Southwestern United States, France and other areas that have received immigration from Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries. In Spain, churros can either be thin (and sometimes knotted) or long and thick, where they are known as porras in some regions. They are normally eaten for breakfast dipped in champurrado, hot chocolate, dulce de leche or café con leche. Sugar is often sprinkled on top.

Also, there's no need to mention China, as what is eaten by them, is NOT a Churro as we know it throughout Latin America (popular in every fare). The Churro's that are becoming popular throughout the USA are the Hispanic type being brought in through immigration.

Welcome!
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Flan
Re your recent edits to Flan: one of Wikipedia's principles is that articles are not about words, but about concepts. Sometimes one word has more than one associated concept. For example, "stock" can mean many things, from a broth to make soup, to partial ownership of a company, to a kind of flower, to a part of a gun. Each concept gets its own page.

When this happens, generally one meaning is the most commonly used in English, worldwide, and that meaning uses the title X. Other meanings may use a different name for the concept, or may be clarified as X (Y). When there are more than 2-3 common meanings for a term, we make a disambiguation page. When there are only 2-3, we put a note (a "hatnote") at the beginning of the article pointing to the other meanings. We do not discuss the other meanings in the body of the article.

In the case of Flan, there is a hatnote reading: ''Not to be confused with Crème caramel, also known as flan or flan de leche. In some parts of the English-speaking world (notably the US), the usual meaning of flan is in fact the same as crème caramel. But in other parts of the English-speaking world (notably the UK), it has the meaning of a kind of pie. As for its meaning in Spanish, that doesn't concern us, because this is the English-language Wikipedia.

I trust this explains why I have been correcting your edits. --Macrakis (talk) 14:47, 16 February 2018 (UTC)


 * Please don't continue reverting in the Flan article. Instead, discuss on the talk page. --Macrakis (talk) 15:17, 17 February 2018 (UTC)