User:MikeWilson
Appearance
|
Wikipedia references[edit]
Editing[edit]
- Wikipedia:How to edit a page
- Wikipedia:Lists
- Wikipedia:Picture tutorial
- Wikipedia:Images
- Help:Table
- Template talk:User
- Wikipedia:Template substitution
Policy[edit]
- Wikipedia:Guide to layout
- Wikipedia:Cite sources
- Wikipedia:Manual of Style (dashes)
- Wikipedia:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)
- Wikipedia:Manual of Style (Japan-related articles)
- Wikipedia:Stub
- Wikipedia:Vandalism
- Wikipedia:Categorization
- Wikipedia:Naming conventions
- Category:Wikipedia how-to
- Wikipedia:Counter Vandalism Unit
- Wikipedia:Administrator intervention against vandalism
- Wikipedia:Verifiability
Deletion[edit]
- Wikipedia:Revert
- Wikipedia:Patent nonsense
- Wikipedia:Articles for deletion
- Wikipedia:Deletion policy
- Wikipedia:Speedy deletions
- Template:AfD in 3 steps
Stuff needing to be done[edit]
- Expand Reference in Scheme programming language
- Terentius redirects to Terence, leaving behind Gaius Terentius Varro
- Fort Harrod redirects to Harrodsburg, Kentucky, but that behavior is broken. There is also a fort called Fort Harrod.
- Create Yoshihisa Tagami
- Create Hamilton Bowen
- Create Echetla
- Create Hans Ørberg and Lingua latina per se illustrata?
- Create Michael Bane, Shooting Gallery (TV series) and Cowboys (TV series)?
- Create Mariko Nagai?
Articles I created[edit]
- Miroku Corporation
- Bolt (firearm)
- 444 Marlin as a redirect to .444 Marlin
- The Cro-Magnons
Other[edit]
Venus Anadyomene is an oil-on-canvas painting by Titian, dating to around 1520. It depicts the Greek goddess Venus rising from the sea and wringing her hair, with a shell visible at the bottom left, taken from a description of Venus by the Greek poet Hesiod in which she was born fully-grown from a shell. The wringing of her hair is a direct imitation of Apelles's lost masterwork, also called Venus Anadyomene. The painting is in good condition and achieved public ownership in 2003 when it was purchased from Francis Egerton, 7th Duke of Sutherland. It is now in the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland.Painting credit: Titian