[Home]Words that should not be used in wikipedia articles

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

There are no words that should not be used in wikipedia articles. That said, there are things to watch out for.

There are some words which many consider to be inherently biased and carry more emotions than contents. Other people think that they're just words and can be used appropriately, and that Wikipedia shouldn't have any fixed policy against any particular word.

Of course that doesn't apply to reporting opinions.

Terrorist

Arguments for use:

Arguments against use:


Why the title of this page might be misguided:


Talk:

(about Boston Tea Party): What on earth are you talking about?? Did they kill any civilians by any chance? By this logic you'll be calling a pickpocket a terrorist soon. I urge you to show any real evidence to the claim that labels of "terrorist" often depend on whether the terrorists were successful in their efforts. --AV

Attacks on property, without killing or injuring anyone, could still be considered terrorism. Suppose instead of flying planes into the WTC, they had placed a massive bomb in the basement, set up in such a way that it would go off in two days, and no one could possibly remove or disable it without setting it off. They then tell the authorities. The authorities evacuate the WTC and surrounding buildings. The bombs go off two days later, destroying completely the WTC, but no one gets killed or injured, but billions of dollars of economic damage are caused. The terrorists release a communique saying "this is payback for [insert your favourite U.S. misdeed here]". Wouldn't that be terrorism? -- SJK

Wanted ? Here it is: do you know a single person who calls Resistance Movement during WWII "terrorists" ? Taw

Sorry I don't have a hard cite on this, but I seem to recall that the Nazis actually did call the resistance fighters terrorists. The Nazis lost. Therefore we say that the resistance fighters were "freedom fighters" not "terrorists".

Sorry, all wrong. First, we don't call them freedom fighters, we call them resistance fighters. Second, we don't call them terrorists not because they won, but because they weren't. If Nazis called them terrorists (and that is yet to be shown), they were simply wrong. --AV

Sorry again, terrorists are the ones who use terror. Very simple, so why not use that word when it fits?

Billion

Since recently, people have disagreed whether a billion is 109 or 1012, and in Spanish, French, Norwegian and German the word still stands for the latter. So it's best to avoid it altogether or at the very least explain it at its first occurance in an article.

Dates

Don't write dates in the form 10/1/2001 or 1.10.2001 because it's not clear what the month and the day is. Europe has used DD.MM.YYYY and the US has used MM.DD.YYYY. Some people think it best to spell out the month. (Or one could write in YYYY-MM-DD format -- there can be no chance of confusion, since no one in the world write dates as YYYY-DD-MM -- although writing dates like this isn't currently normal Wikipedia practice.)

Some people think that the preferred date format ought to be YYYY-MM-DD since it is easy to interpret and standardized in ISO 8601 (see http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime).

Natural number

The main argument against use is that it has two meanings:

One of them should be explicitely used instead of natural numbers.
What about uses where it does not matter which is chosen? For example, "Aleph-null is the cardinality of the natural numbers" is true regardless of which definition is used. I see no problem with using natural number in those circumstances -- SJK

In Wikipedia, "natural number" unequivocally means "non-negative integer", as the natural number article explains. So if you link to the natural number article, it's clear what you mean. --AxelBoldt


HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions
Last edited December 16, 2001 9:39 pm by Zundark (diff)
Search: