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Style Guide

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Revision as of 21:34, 24 February 2019
Suggestion 9: Use female gender.
Revision as of 18:53, 24 November 2019
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 # While some nations (e.g. Russia, Japan) use the male gender in reference to their warships, there is considerable resistance among readers to us doing so here. Use female gender pronouns to avoid contention.  # While some nations (e.g. Russia, Japan) use the male gender in reference to their warships, there is considerable resistance among readers to us doing so here. Use female gender pronouns to avoid contention.
  
?[[Category:Rules pages]]+[[Category:World of Warships]]

Revision as of 18:53, 24 November 2019

Style guidelines for the EN (English) World of Warships wikipedia are found below. Contributions made by players should adhere to these general guidelines; entries that do not may be deleted (or possibly edited until they comply, depending on the quality of the entry).

  1. The correct way to reference a specific tier is "Tier VI" (for example). "tier 6" — with the lower-case "T" and Arabic numeral rather than Roman — is incorrect. The lower case ("tier") is only used when not referencing a specific tier.
  2. Please use North American English spellings. For example, "armour" is not correct for this version of the wiki.
  3. Second person ("you") should be avoided at all times. Please reference "players" or "captains" and use third person notations wherever necessary.
  4. When referencing quantities of something - such as gun barrels - do not use back-to-back Arabic numerals. Instead of typing "12 15-inch guns", please use the format "twelve (12) 15-inch guns" for clarity.
  5. Speaking of guns, remember to hyphenate "15-inch".
  6. Similarly, ship classes used as a noun do NOT require hyphenation. Example: "The Neptune class was never
  7. When referring to an entire class of ships, a definite article is used. Example: "The Iowa-class battleships were among the fastest battleships ever built." The subject here is a group of ships, which is why the definite article is used in most cases (depending on how the sentence is structured).
  8. When referring to a specific ship, grammar rules dictate that an article is not used at all. Example: Bismarck’s fifth salvo, however, produced catastrophic results." Think of it this way: when refer to a specific person, their name is used. People aren't referred to as "the Dave" or "the Bill" or "the Janet". The same rule applies for ships. When they are singled out specifically by name, the definite article is dropped and they are simply referred to as Fletcher or Scharnhorst or Danae.
  9. While some nations (e.g. Russia, Japan) use the male gender in reference to their warships, there is considerable resistance among readers to us doing so here. Use female gender pronouns to avoid contention.