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User:Cnilep

This user helped rewrite "Orange (word)" become a good article.
This user is a WikiGnome.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cnilep is Dr. Chad Nilep, a linguist and a professor at Nagoya University.

Cnilep created the pages Martin Joos, Penelope Eckert, Scott Kiesling, Susan Gal, Kathryn Woolard, Norma Mendoza-Denton, Peter Auer, Florian Coulmas, Willem Levelt, Karen Emmorey, Marina Nespor, Interactional sociolinguistics, Interactional linguistics, Positive anymore, Do-support, Zero-marking in English, and Accidental gap among others and undertook major re-writes of Code-switching, Code mixing, Variety (linguistics), Passive voice, Active voice, and Regional vocabularies of American English.

He started the essay Wikipedia:You must feed the trolls to remind himself that some of what appears to be edit-warring or vandalism on language-related articles actually stems from deeply held and well-intended beliefs.

Cnilep is a member of WikiProject Linguistics.

Chad Nilep created the page ja:井上史雄 on the Japanese-language ウィキペティア, but he does not regularly watch or edit any pages there.

Barnometer™

The Citation Barnstar. For all your hard work getting Regional vocabularies of American English up to snuff. Thank you! +Angr, 08:00, 30 May 2009 (UTC) The Guidance Barnstar. For showing the way to the hardest to find reference sources :-) Haruth, 14:37, 4 May 2010 (UTC) New Page Patrol. The WMF, 26 November 2011 The Tireless Contributor Barnstar. For your linguistics articles, I award you this Tireless Contributor barnstar :). Thanks for making new page patrol enjoyable! I've also given you the autopatrolled userright. Ironholds, 23:51, 16 May 2013 (UTC) The Original Barnstar. For numerous and frequent edits of varying sizes. ReconditeRodent, 08:00, 26 May 2013 (UTC) The Copyeditor's Barnstar. For knowing the difference between a redirect and a disambiguation page --evrik, 03:31, 14 December 2013 (UTC) The Barnstar of Good Humor. Pardon my malapropism! Bearian, 14:47, 13 February 2014 (UTC) A beer for you! I agree with your redirect rather than deletion of the Washington Convention article. Thanks. LukasMatt 03:18, 21 April 2014 (UTC) Responsiveness Barnstar—Thanks for taking a look at Orwellian! GentlemanGhost, 06:00, 26 April 2014

noob involved been around veteran seen it all older than the Cabal itself

!Definition

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This is not a definition of orange.

An object is perceived as orange if and only if it reflects or emits visible light of between 590–635 nm wavelength, 510–480 THz frequency.

It is a definition (in the sense of "setting of bounds or limits") of the set of things that are colored orange.

This is a definition (in the sense of "stating exactly what a thing is, or what a word means") of orange.

Orange is a color located between red and yellow on the spectrum of light; it includes visible light of between 590 and 635 nm wavelength, 510 to 480 THz frequency.

This is a definition (in both senses) of orange (in another sense).

The orange is the fruit of various cultivars and species of citrus, especially Citrus × sinensis (sweet orange) and Citrus reticulata (Mandarin orange).

Tools

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TO DO

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  • European perspectives in Linguistic anthropology
    • Stanton Wortham (2008) "Linguistic Anthropology of Education", pp. 849-859, Encyclopedia of Language and Education
    • Jan Blommaert, James Collins, Monica Heller (2001) "Discourse and Critique: Part 1", pp. 5-12, Critique of Anthropology doi: 10.1177/0308275X0102100101
    • Jan Blommaert and Chris Bulcaen (2000) "Critical Discourse Analysis", pp. 447-466, Annual Review of Anthropology http://www.jstor.org/stable/223428
  • /Sandbox
  • Patrol new pages