Editing MarioWiki talk:Generic subjects

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::Having it "read organically" is vague and subjective. It's not grammatically incorrect to say that something is from elsewhere that appears in ''Super Mario'', and it's definitely not assuming readers won't know that crates, apples, and other things are not from ''Super Mario''. I agree with Somethingone that issues with this change is nowhere near as big of a deal as it's being made out to be. It's just structuring the sentences to say that something generic that is not from ''Super Mario'' appears in such media, and it acknowledges the distinction instantly with the first sentence. [[User:Super Mario RPG|Super Mario RPG]] ([[User talk:Super Mario RPG|talk]]) 13:46, July 8, 2024 (EDT)
::Having it "read organically" is vague and subjective. It's not grammatically incorrect to say that something is from elsewhere that appears in ''Super Mario'', and it's definitely not assuming readers won't know that crates, apples, and other things are not from ''Super Mario''. I agree with Somethingone that issues with this change is nowhere near as big of a deal as it's being made out to be. It's just structuring the sentences to say that something generic that is not from ''Super Mario'' appears in such media, and it acknowledges the distinction instantly with the first sentence. [[User:Super Mario RPG|Super Mario RPG]] ([[User talk:Super Mario RPG|talk]]) 13:46, July 8, 2024 (EDT)
::Keep in mind that poor implementations of this syntax can occur and I have tried my best to correct them as they cropped up. Take [[Special:Diff/4283118|this sample]] from a revision of the [[Whale]] page, which I find strikingly similar to the "Lions in Narnia" example you gave:<br>"Whales in the ''Super Mario'' franchise are large aquatic mammals that first appear in ''Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic'' and ''Super Mario Bros. 2''.<br>This sentence introduces whales that are specifically from the Mario franchise, as though it primes itself to describe what makes ''those'' unique in comparison to real life or other fictional whales... only to then describe what everyone's image of a whale is ("are large aquatic mammals"). You and me would both agree here that this accomplishes just as much as simply saying "Whales are large aquatic mammals that appear in the Super Mario franchise", except it does so in a passive manner that feels kind of strange to read.<br>Otherwise, I'm in agreement with Somethingone's and Super Mario RPG's comments above: not only you'd achieve more in the way of respecting your reader's intelligence by *not* reiterating a generic object's most mundane traits, but there are no grammatical concerns to be had over such a sentence as "Soccer balls appear in Mario games as interactive objects." I admittedly don't yet have a word to say on the seesaws and snow sculptures, because those that appear in Mario games are indeed constructed quite distinctly from their general concepts, but Super Mario 3D World's trapezes are direct analogues of the real world equipment used at circus shows and I believe the lead sentence of their page should undergo the "generic subject"(tm) approach. {{User:Koopa con Carne/Sig}} 17:53, July 8, 2024 (EDT)
::Keep in mind that poor implementations of this syntax can occur and I have tried my best to correct them as they cropped up. Take [[Special:Diff/4283118|this sample]] from a revision of the [[Whale]] page, which I find strikingly similar to the "Lions in Narnia" example you gave:<br>"Whales in the ''Super Mario'' franchise are large aquatic mammals that first appear in ''Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic'' and ''Super Mario Bros. 2''.<br>This sentence introduces whales that are specifically from the Mario franchise, as though it primes itself to describe what makes ''those'' unique in comparison to real life or other fictional whales... only to then describe what everyone's image of a whale is ("are large aquatic mammals"). You and me would both agree here that this accomplishes just as much as simply saying "Whales are large aquatic mammals that appear in the Super Mario franchise", except it does so in a passive manner that feels kind of strange to read.<br>Otherwise, I'm in agreement with Somethingone's and Super Mario RPG's comments above: not only you'd achieve more in the way of respecting your reader's intelligence by *not* reiterating a generic object's most mundane traits, but there are no grammatical concerns to be had over such a sentence as "Soccer balls appear in Mario games as interactive objects." I admittedly don't yet have a word to say on the seesaws and snow sculptures, because those that appear in Mario games are indeed constructed quite distinctly from their general concepts, but Super Mario 3D World's trapezes are direct analogues of the real world equipment used at circus shows and I believe the lead sentence of their page should undergo the "generic subject"(tm) approach. {{User:Koopa con Carne/Sig}} 17:53, July 8, 2024 (EDT)
:::I think I overreacted to an absurd degree, especially to {{User|Super Mario RPG}}, and that was unkind of me. I am sorry. - [[User:Nintendo101|Nintendo101]] ([[User talk:Nintendo101|talk]]) 23:24, July 8, 2024 (EDT)

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