User talk:John Reid
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Contents
Thread title | Replies | Last modified |
---|---|---|
Questionable translations | 0 | 14:35, 30 October 2023 |
VisualEditor | 1 | 04:14, 11 May 2014 |
MathJax translation | 0 | 15:56, 24 April 2014 |
Edit/Eidit | 7 | 22:41, 14 March 2014 |
Hey, I'm the administrator of Scots Wikipedia, and I'm sorry to say but several of your translations and the advice you've been giving out demonstrate a less comprehensive understanding of the Scots language than you've claimed. Just looking over some of your translations, I've seen misinterpretations of how the language works, grammatical errors, rare/outdated word usage, typos and even using an entirely different language. For example:
- Yinlie is not a valid spelling for "only". I can only assume that you took yin (which does mean one) and applied it to on(e)ly. I asked two other native speakers and they both said "yinlie" was wrong as well
- Naw is responsive and should not be used as a negative. It should be nae or no (Naw, there's nae buns left)
- Ceaut and creaut are either extremely rare or non-existent in Modern Scots
- Aneat It's spelt "anent"
- Cræft is Old English, not Scots
- Skauk I honestly cannot find any evidence that this word exists. Somebody else said one of their dictionaries had "scouk" meaning skulk, but it doesn't seem to exist in Modern Scots
As for the advice given here, ee/ei is actually rather interchangable in Scots. Just comparing oreeginal and oreiginal, both have roughly equal numbers of uses. Eedit/eidit though gives zero hits.
Given the events of three years ago, and that quite a few of your faulty translations overwrote the translations of others that were fine (like this), I'm going to have to examine all the translations done
Hi,
Thanks for your translations to Scots.
Can you please complete the VisualEditor translation? There's very little left to do and I'd love to see it at 100%.
I was very pleasantly surprised to see that the VisualEditor user manual is almost fully translated to Scots as well.
Hi, I'm an editor from the Scots Wikipedia. I'm sorry I reverted your edit changing the Scots translation of edit to eidit; I wasn't familiar with "eidit" because It's not used at the Scots Wikipedia. Anyway I'll respect the decision of a native Scots speaker. Thank you.
Hallo, I'd just like to say that because of your edit that I realised that it should be "eedit" using Scots orthography, so you have helped in this regard. Your other edits have also helped somewhat to improve my translations.
Whoa! slow down there, I think you've mis interpreted my message. I was trying to say that "eedit" is the correct translation, not "eidit". Also I should point out that "Undae" poor Scots and the accepted spelling is "Ondae". "y" at the end of noun roots becomes "ie" in Scots. A little research on your part should confirm this. It was your mistakes that got me thinking, I didn't say that you were mostly right, (only a few of your edits were). Hopfully I haven't come accross as a raving lunitic with this post.
I just said ok, I wasn't saying that I was right. My translations were simply based on what is used at the Scots Wikipedia, by not only me, but many other editors. Eidit, eedit, ondae, delyte, and many other words used in your translations are not used on the Scots Wikipedia, but I'm not saying you're wrong, after all I'm only sco-2. But many editors that have written articles in the Scots Wikipedia are native Scots speakers. I know I reverted my edits to "eidit", I wasn't thinking.