User talk:Merimoocoww

Welcome
Hello, Merimoocoww and welcome to Wikipedia! It appears you are participating in a class project. If you haven't done so already, we encourage you to go through our training for students.

If you need help, check out Questions, ask me on, or ask your question on this page and then place  before the question. Please also read this helpful advice for students.

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Your instructor or professor may wish to set up a course page, if your class doesn't already have one. It is highly recommended that you place this text:  on the talk page of any articles you are working on as part of your Wikipedia-related course assignment. This will let other editors know this article is a subject of an educational assignment and aid your communication with them.

We hope you like it here and encourage you to stay even after your assignment is finished! Jprg1966  (talk)  22:06, 14 January 2014 (UTC)

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Welcome
In reponse to your querry regarding is there anything you can do, I have a suggestion. Take a look at List of current members of the Maryland House of Delegates and you will see that most of the Maryland legislators names are in blue, meaning articles have been created about them. But there are at least three names in red, meaning there is no current article. If you click on those names in red you will be directed to a page prompting you to start an article. Creating an article of any of the unfinished legislator pages would be helpful. Thanks! « Maryland stater » « reply » 13:16, 8 February 2014 (UTC)

An answer to your question
I'm being a little nosy and have been reading the blog entries here and been helping out people with their articles. I have no connection to your class, I just feel like being helpful. :) I notice in your entry that you were confused about how to reference the same source if you needed to do it more than once? Here's how to do it.

Normally, when you cite a reference, you use  . If you have a source that you want to use multiple times, instead of  .

After having done that once, if you want to then use the source again, all you have to do is put   and the Whatever should be the same descriptive term you used for the original source reference. Also, because you added that "/" at the end there, you don't need to add anything else. No template or   is needed. That alone will duplicate the reference and add a "b" in the reference list linking to that new spot.

I hope that is helpful. Did I explain it simply enough? Silver seren C 03:30, 26 March 2014 (UTC)

Disambiguation link notification for May 6
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