Editing MarioWiki talk:Generic subjects
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:::::Personally, I don't see how the X-Z-Y format is any better or worse than the X-Y-Z format. Neither of them read as "awkward and strange"; they're both natural syntax constructions that would be used by people as openings to a topic. I feel like it's a bit extreme to call one "awkward". | :::::Personally, I don't see how the X-Z-Y format is any better or worse than the X-Y-Z format. Neither of them read as "awkward and strange"; they're both natural syntax constructions that would be used by people as openings to a topic. I feel like it's a bit extreme to call one "awkward". | ||
:::::As for why X-Z-Y is being used in generic subjects now; I'm not the one who decided that, but I would take a look at your prior statement to see why it might be considered optimal. "No, it is about what a trapeze is in the Super Mario franchise." - "Trapezes appear in Z as platforms" may accomplish this better than "Trapezes are platforms that appear in Z", ''if'' your priority is discussing what a trapeze is in the Super Mario franchise in the context of it as a generic<!--For lack of a better term. I don't really know how else to describe it, but I mean generic as in "Word that is loaded with the context of an entity you would normally see in the real world"--> object. The latter is better if you're discussing what it is in the context of a unique<!--As in, not fitting the definition of 'generic' I described in the other hidden note here-->object. '''But again''', the difference is nowhere near as big as you're making it out to be, in my opinion. {{User:Somethingone/sig}} 23:06, July 7, 2024 (EDT) | :::::As for why X-Z-Y is being used in generic subjects now; I'm not the one who decided that, but I would take a look at your prior statement to see why it might be considered optimal. "No, it is about what a trapeze is in the Super Mario franchise." - "Trapezes appear in Z as platforms" may accomplish this better than "Trapezes are platforms that appear in Z", ''if'' your priority is discussing what a trapeze is in the Super Mario franchise in the context of it as a generic<!--For lack of a better term. I don't really know how else to describe it, but I mean generic as in "Word that is loaded with the context of an entity you would normally see in the real world"--> object. The latter is better if you're discussing what it is in the context of a unique<!--As in, not fitting the definition of 'generic' I described in the other hidden note here-->object. '''But again''', the difference is nowhere near as big as you're making it out to be, in my opinion. {{User:Somethingone/sig}} 23:06, July 7, 2024 (EDT) | ||
::::::I think the subtext of my issue is that | |||
I don't see such article openers as inherently awkward. They presuppose that readers already know what a certain subject is, which is a natural consideration with regard to an object as ubiquitous in the real world as, say, [[grape]] or [[Soccer Ball|soccer ball]]. To use grapes as an example: though it's true that their appearances in games are merely virtual symbols of the real world fruit, and not the actual fruit that you can just grab from the screen using your actual arm and eat, the identity of the object remains the same by virtue of being a representation of grapes, and you'd expect anyone with the requisite mental faculties to access this site to make this difference on their own. Frankly, "Grapes are fruits in the Mario franchise" sounds more awkward because it implies they're an invention of Shigeru Miyamito et al. Sure, no one would believe that to be the case, but it's precisely the absurdity of that statement that occasionally makes the wiki [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEoUeUeFDpE an object of ridicule] and I'd like to avoid that where possible. (The Super Mario Facts twitter account is also a trove of statements of that ilk taken out of context; you should see the replies to those.)<br>With all that said, I only apply this sentence structure to things with some degree of ubiquity in the real world, and not to just about any real world thing that is immortalized in the Mario franchise. I wouldn't agree on using it on an article such as [[Abraham Lincoln]] because (a) not everyone knows who this person was in real life, even if they've seen references to him in pop culture (god knows I learned about his role in American history long after I saw him in cartoons as a child), and (b) he ought to be contextualized the same way other real world people are in the wiki, otherwise there would exist an inconsistency, [[David Grenewetzki|especially]] since [[Satoru Iwata|sometimes]], real world people with involvement in the making of Mario media also end up being represented in said media.<br>As for where I'd place a cutoff between "generic" and "not generic enough", I don't exactly know. In a [[User talk:Koopa con Carne#Generic and real content|brief convo]] with Super Mario RPG (the user) I mentioned "[[Avalanche (obstacle)|avalanche]]" as being situated somewhere in that ballpark. {{User:Koopa con Carne/Sig}} 03:14, July 8, 2024 (EDT) | I don't see such article openers as inherently awkward. They presuppose that readers already know what a certain subject is, which is a natural consideration with regard to an object as ubiquitous in the real world as, say, [[grape]] or [[Soccer Ball|soccer ball]]. To use grapes as an example: though it's true that their appearances in games are merely virtual symbols of the real world fruit, and not the actual fruit that you can just grab from the screen using your actual arm and eat, the identity of the object remains the same by virtue of being a representation of grapes, and you'd expect anyone with the requisite mental faculties to access this site to make this difference on their own. Frankly, "Grapes are fruits in the Mario franchise" sounds more awkward because it implies they're an invention of Shigeru Miyamito et al. Sure, no one would believe that to be the case, but it's precisely the absurdity of that statement that occasionally makes the wiki [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEoUeUeFDpE an object of ridicule] and I'd like to avoid that where possible. (The Super Mario Facts twitter account is also a trove of statements of that ilk taken out of context; you should see the replies to those.)<br>With all that said, I only apply this sentence structure to things with some degree of ubiquity in the real world, and not to just about any real world thing that is immortalized in the Mario franchise. I wouldn't agree on using it on an article such as [[Abraham Lincoln]] because (a) not everyone knows who this person was in real life, even if they've seen references to him in pop culture (god knows I learned about his role in American history long after I saw him in cartoons as a child), and (b) he ought to be contextualized the same way other real world people are in the wiki, otherwise there would exist an inconsistency, [[David Grenewetzki|especially]] since [[Satoru Iwata|sometimes]], real world people with involvement in the making of Mario media also end up being represented in said media.<br>As for where I'd place a cutoff between "generic" and "not generic enough", I don't exactly know. In a [[User talk:Koopa con Carne#Generic and real content|brief convo]] with Super Mario RPG (the user) I mentioned "[[Avalanche (obstacle)|avalanche]]" as being situated somewhere in that ballpark. {{User:Koopa con Carne/Sig}} 03:14, July 8, 2024 (EDT) |