All rights reserved. But does the war in question have a name? grand bleu sur jaune. Unsure about the reliability of Ackerman. Very broad page ranges - in some instances in the order of hundreds of pages - are not useful for verification purposes. The article was promoted by Laser brain via FACBot (talk) 16:58, 6 March 2015 (UTC) [46]. "Holden claimed his first aerial victory while No.

—, Many thanks Crisco – and I'm certainly not going to hate you for doing your review properly! Link New York World, New York Herald Tribune and Geological Survey of Canada? PD-1996 added.

* Avant toute consultation, merci de lire cet avertissement --.

I'm concerned about the Butterworth source. "... was an American politician of the Democratic Party who was Governor of South Carolina from 1890 to 1894, and a United States Senator ...": What do you think of this? What is the source for this data? ": you've just indicated that there are two traditions, so I think this should be "The older Hachijō-daiko tradition ...". bring to successful conclusion; reach a goal. —, OK, have done. "was the key to Union victory in the West" - you need to explain why (it was the final significant barrier to Union control of the Mississippi), "Grant arrived in Chattanooga by horseback, implementing plans to relieve the siege and resume the offensive" - his development of these plans should be noted (this wording suggests that he was "implementing" someone else's plans), The para on Grant's assumption of command of all Union Armies should note that he seriously considered making his headquarters in the West, "his headquarters with Meade's army" - it would be better to specify that this was the famous Army of the Potomac, "Grant and Lincoln devised a strategy of coordinated Union offensives" - did Lincoln play a significant role in developing this strategy? Published outside the USA before 1923, as tag says and National Library of France confirms. Even from a distance, the effect of his costume was stunning.

A group is more than the sum of the individuals in it. Find more ways to say ensemble, along with related words, antonyms and example phrases at Thesaurus.com, the world's most trusted free thesaurus. Slangish, since I assume you mean that they stiffed the Italians... "he led a powerful faction in England" - I assume we mean Lancaster here? "Views on Edward's sexuality have continued to develop over the years." I've replaced these Nakmoto and Petersen citations using with appropriate RS.

Better to avoid "today", as it may change. It does not often fall to the lot of a boy to perform a deed so heroic. The image of Timothy West is forced at 200px unlike the others. I deleted "and Lincoln". Same with FN109, 197, 198, check for others, Thanks-- I've fixed these ones.
His memoirs don't say, and I don't recall his biographers giving a reason, either, though I'll recheck this evening. Since it was published in 1909 (or perhaps earlier) doesn't this mean it can actually stay? You linked Gibraltar in the lede but not it seems in the first instance in the article. 2 Squadron was still flying DH.5s, before it began converting to Royal Aircraft Factory S.E.5s in December 1917" - do the sources give a date for when he claimed this victory? --. Thanks for this Crisco 1492. Maybe a page here on the wiki?

–, Oil paintings aren't painted directly onto canvas (or wood, plaster, brick etc). "but war broke out again in 1294" - when was there war with France before? —, "A separately uploaded crop" was said before the correct link was provided; that would mean that a crop of the image which was already in the article (and not the one currently on NASA's webpage, which neither of us knew existed at the time). The only journal entry for him in 1975 is "Some Remnants of Bede's Lost Liber Epigrammatum". In addition to being one of the world's most knowledgeable film historians he's a really nice guy as well!). The trouble is, in modern use (including on all Wikipedia's pages about the myth) "Odysseus" is used almost exclusively and "Ulysses" is almost obsolete, so it's not reasonable to assume the reader will know that "Ulysses" is a reference to the. and shorter than what? It is a confusing story, for certain, and you have done a great job getting the details in there, but there might be a way to make it flow more smoothly. [66] The official court records, however, show Gaveston being only temporarily exiled, supported by a comfortable stipend; no reason is given for the order, suggesting that it may have been an act aimed at punishing the prince in some way."
Classifications not officially recognised? The article was promoted by Laser brain via FACBot (talk) 16:58, 6 March 2015 (UTC) [44]. –, What about "include it in the exhibition"?

The description you give: "If two theories are related by a duality, it means that one theory can be transformed in some way so that it ends up looking just like the other theory" is pretty strong; wouldn't that imply that all five of these theories can be transformed into any of the others? Does UPitt's press omit the "Press", or is that missing? Thanks -, Well, there is an alternative... it depends if anyone at, Thanks for that - I've added a request there for something suitable.As it may take some time, we will have to go with the too small version at the moment: what US tag should I add to cover the US? - the second half of this sentence doesn't sit comfortably with the first (and it seems to relate to the sentence before it). This article is about... a racist, bigot and killer, who was also a senator and governor of his state, and a non-trivial figure in American history. Same problem with File:Senate-Johnson-Impeachment-Trials.jpg, File:Ely_S._Parker.jpg, File:Kalakaua_Grant_state_visit_1874.jpg: source link is dead, Fixed the first. - Dank (, OK, let's lose it. GermanJoe may have a better suggestion; I'm not known as an expert formatter by any means.-, So each essay in the book is from a different time? What does crisco mean? I've just seen this additional question but am unable to find any instances of "the latter" within the article. —, I'm being a tool. Not a great one, but I've found one relating to the war. I'll ping, There are a fair few duplicate links in the article, which you can highlight by installing. Cussler was perhaps too hasty in declaring that he had found. Some of Snuggums's suggested alternative words are worth considering.

Thanks.

The glossary? I guess my initial read of it was that it wasn't clear that it may be considered a taiko, either. Great article, I enjoyed reading it. "Depending on Lee's actions, Grant would join forces with Butler's armies and be fed supplies from the James" - the first part of this sentence implies that Grant had several options planned to take into account Lee's different potential responses, but then the second part of the sentence specifies only one option. -quite a strong claim, perhaps state "According to the author xx". My detailed comments are in the peer review, and I have nothing particular to add now. close working relationship. "The chū-daiko is a medium-sized nagadō-daiko ranging from 1.8 to 2.6 shaku (55 to 79 cm; 21 to 31 in),[67]" - not seeing this in that source, but I think perhaps you meant to cite. "uses a stick or tube to play the drum at hip height" - FN 11 refers to the drum itself as a tube, played with a stick.

Not exactly a huge problem, just thought i'd mention it. In October 1872, when he made his investment as reported in the previous section.

At present the body text is roughly 8500 characters, and the lead is 1571 characters, which doesn't seem wildly unbalanced. Thank you very much Brian for all your help and the extremely kind words. Sounds fine to me - thanks for reviewing the article. Perhaps a note as to who Lewis was in the lead?

bleu sur blanc

I still say a crop. the complete outfit of clothes a person is wearing. —, I tried that, and TinEye as well. I left a query on the original uploader's talk page. "prevent themselves hearing": I'm not insisting on "prevent themselves from hearing", I'm just asking you to consider the advantages in reduced parsing time (particularly in AmEng, but also probably for Brits). 374-375) - all were correct summaries of the pages but without close paraphrasing concerns. - modern historians can't be sure at this distance, but there's no strong evidence to support the contemporary allegation.

I'll post a request at WT:FAC for the former, perhaps Tim could look after the latter?