User talk:Dexterous
Welcome!
Hello, Dexterous, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few links to pages you might find helpful:
- Introduction and Getting started
- Contributing to Wikipedia
- The five pillars of Wikipedia
- How to edit a page and How to develop articles
- How to create your first article
- Simplified Manual of Style
You may also want to take the Wikipedia Adventure, an interactive tour that will help you learn the basics of editing Wikipedia.
Please remember to
Copying within Wikipedia requires proper attribution
Thank you for your contributions to Wikipedia. It appears that you copied or moved text from Marvin Minsky into Parallel computing. While you are welcome to re-use Wikipedia's content, here or elsewhere, Wikipedia's licensing does require that you provide attribution to the original contributor(s). When copying within Wikipedia, this is supplied at minimum in an edit summary at the page into which you've copied content, disclosing the copying and linking to the copied page, e.g.,
copied content from [[page name]]; see that page's history for attribution
. It is good practice, especially if copying is extensive, to also place a properly formatted {{copied}} template on the talk pages of the source and destination. The attribution has been provided for this situation, but if you have copied material between pages before, even if it was a long time ago, please provide attribution for that duplication. You can read more about the procedure and the reasons at Wikipedia:Copying within Wikipedia. Thank you. If you are the sole author of the prose that was moved, attribution is not required. — Diannaa 🍁 (talk) 13:33, 22 July 2017 (UTC)
Adding External Links to your site
You have added links to your web site http://neuroclusterbrain.com/ on several pages. I have removed them, because they do not conform to WikiPedia
As for the "Free online Greek and Latin Roots Finder", it is not useful at all, as well as not being a widely accepted resource. For example, for the word "the", it claims that it is related to Greek theos 'god' and Greek tithenai 'to put'. It is not related to either.
Adding links to neuroclusterbrain also violates our policy on
Thanks for your understanding. --Macrakis (talk) 19:58, 21 September 2019 (UTC)