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  • imparted using different language. "A photo of a purported UFO" - it means the same thing without the extra baggage. ---J.S (t|c) 21:33, 5 October 2006...
    193 KB (30,896 words) - 13:04, 4 March 2024
  • don't speak Spanish very well to think that "Chupacabras" is necessarily plural. In Spanish, compound words such as this very often include a plural term...
    78 KB (11,213 words) - 20:19, 22 October 2023
  • 2006 (UTC) Foreign versions of term: In Spanish, Portuguese, and French, the acronym for UFO is OVNI (in Spanish, Objeto Volador No Identificado, in Portuguese...
    150 KB (23,282 words) - 07:44, 1 December 2021
  • insert it. —David Levy 00:48, 19 June 2006 (UTC) In MediaWiki:Monobook.js, change the line: document.write('<style type="text/css">/*<![CDATA[*/ #siteSub...
    154 KB (21,747 words) - 17:37, 7 July 2023
  • what for the new Universal Language Selector yet, but you can find all the key mappings for the IPA keyboard in this little JS file. — Lfdder (talk) 11:13...
    100 KB (14,905 words) - 00:07, 13 September 2018
  • very large project that includes people over multiple languages and time zones. You may not know a user name from another language doesn't mean this user...
    612 KB (82,375 words) - 16:28, 7 June 2022
  • to their wikipedia, but it's all gibberish...it's in some weird foreign language...some words I recognize, but they are all spelled funny. I tried telling...
    201 KB (27,217 words) - 20:58, 7 June 2022
  • BBC, CNN, MSNBC, Reuters, AP, Al Arabiya, many Spanish-language newspapers (Venezuela, Mexico and Spain), and too many blogs, forums and other websites...
    115 KB (17,259 words) - 02:33, 5 February 2024
  • That is no justification. I would not reply to you with a stream of profanities just to assert my freedom of speech -- just because I can. Sensible judgement...
    213 KB (31,448 words) - 07:44, 9 March 2024
  • Italo-centric/extremist Brits. Icsunonove 04:37, 1 November 2007 (UTC) Wow, threats, profanity; all in just a few sentences. Then this hypocritical tirade given to us...
    328 KB (49,443 words) - 10:36, 29 January 2023
  • president articles use the same language as the Obama article, but different language from the Romney language. If you have a change of heart, and edit the Romney...
    165 KB (36,644 words) - 08:09, 4 March 2023
  • displeasure with pi in the strongest possible terms - often involving profanity. So, the 1 or 2 sentences in Popular Culture section should reflect what...
    148 KB (21,181 words) - 18:40, 2 February 2023
  • 'ultracapitalist liberals' or sometimes, less tactfully, just a long string of profanities. I don't know who uses the term minarchism, but I've never seen it used...
    209 KB (29,141 words) - 09:34, 10 March 2023
  • be used: The series lowered the bar on permissible violence, sex and profanity at the same time that it elevated viewers’ taste, cultivating an appetite...
    144 KB (21,406 words) - 01:53, 14 May 2023
  • get a heated debate between free-speech advocates and those who dislike profanity, etc. But that is about regulating transmission, not reception. Any legislator...
    124 KB (20,082 words) - 00:13, 15 March 2023
  • propensities, seems to have been destroyed’, that he indulged ‘in the grossest profanity’ and that he was ‘no longer Gage’ are now routinely quoted... So, as in...
    927 KB (103,191 words) - 16:44, 27 April 2022