Welcome to Wikipedia! edit

Dear Anne Elizabeth: Welcome to Wikipedia, a free and open-content encyclopedia. I hope you enjoy contributing. To help get you settled in, I thought you might find the following pages useful:

Don't worry too much about being perfect. Very few of us are! Just in case you are not perfect, click here to see how you can avoid making common mistakes.

If you are stuck, and looking for help, please come to the New contributors' help page, where experienced Wikipedians can answer any queries you have! Or, you can just type {{helpme}} on your user page, and someone will show up shortly to answer your questions.

Wikipedians try to follow a strict policy of never biting new users. If you are unsure of how to do something, you are welcome to ask a more experienced user such as an administrator. One last bit of advice: please sign any dicussion comment with four tildes (~~~~). The software will automatically convert this into your signature which can be altered in the "Preferences" tab at the top of the screen. I hope I have not overwhelmed you with information. If you need any help just let me know. Once again welcome to Wikipedia, and don't forget to tell us about yourself and be BOLD!


Thanks for your recent, useful edits -- you're off to a great start!.

Deletions: I appreciate the effort you put into reviewing Vertissage and commenting on its talk page before nominating it for speedy deletion. I wish more people made that sort of effort before pulling the deletion trigger (especially with newcomer's first articles). Take a look at Wikipedia:Proposed deletion. This form of deletion (sometime referred to as "PROD") is a little more deliberate and gives the article's creator 5 days to fix an article. These articles get tagged using the {{prod}} tag.

Speedy deletion is almost like a summary execution on Wikipedia. If you tag an article this way, it can be gone in just a minute or two -- before you even finish putting something on the article's talk page (in fact, it will often get deleted without anyone even bothering to read your comments on the talk page). If there's every any doubt at all, don't use speedy deletion; if it has even a sliver of potential merit (sufficient to justify a 30-second Google search, for instance), PROD affords a more deliberate review. (In Vertissage's case, someone else pulled your speedy deletion tag off just before the hangman open the trapdoor.)

Also, if the author is a brand-new contributor (as this article's author was), there's value in giving them 5 days and a little coaching. I try to help newcomers who post new articles. They're usually pretty dodgy on the first go-round but if the author's really interested in the article, they can bring it up to something usable. Also, seeing your first article killed in a flash is very demotivating. If nothing else, I suggest putting a brief one-sentence courtesy comment on the author's talk page letting them know what you did and encouraging them going into the future.

Anyway, keep up the good work. Once again, welcome and thank you. --A. B. 11:30, 2 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Lawrence Venuti and other translators edit

Hi Anne Elizabeth, a fellow translator welcomes you. I have just created the article about Lawrence Venuti, and linked your asked article of Friedrich Schleiermacher. You may contribute with these and other translation stubs. Regards from Uruguay, Fadesga (talk) 16:06, 19 October 2010 (UTC)Reply