Jump to content

User:Astronomyinertia

This user has autopatrolled rights on the English Wikipedia.
This user wrote "1998 Temple of the Tooth attack", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "1989 Temple of the Tooth attack", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Modern Technologies", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society", which became a DYK.
This user helped to make "List of Sri Lanka Twenty20 International cricketers" a featured list.
This user helped to make "List of international cricket centuries by Kumar Sangakkara" a featured list.
This user wrote "Ridi Viharaya", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Angampora", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "The Sri Lanka Gazette", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Sunday Observer (Sri Lanka)", which became a DYK.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

User:Astronomyinertia
   
User talk:Astronomyinertia
   
Special:Emailuser/Astronomyinertia
   
Special:Contributions/Astronomyinertia
   
User:Astronomyinertia/Awards
   
User:Astronomyinertia/Articles
   
User:Astronomyinertia/Images
   
User:Astronomyinertia/DYK
                           
"Dewey Defeats Truman"
"Dewey Defeats Truman" was an erroneous banner headline on the front page of the earliest edition of the Chicago Daily Tribune on November 3, 1948, the day after incumbent U.S. president Harry S. Truman won an upset victory over his opponent, Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, in the 1948 presidential election. The Chicago Daily Tribune, which had once referred to Democratic candidate Truman as a "nincompoop", was a famously Republican-leaning paper. For about a year before the 1948 election, the printers who operated the linotype machines at the Tribune and other Chicago papers had been on strike in protest of the Taft–Hartley Act. Around the same time, the Tribune had switched to a method by which copy was composed on typewriters, photographed, then engraved onto printing plates. This required the paper to go to press several hours earlier than had been usual. On November 4, as Truman passed through St. Louis Union Station in Missouri on the way to Washington, he stepped onto the rear platform of his train car, the Ferdinand Magellan, and was handed a copy of the erroneous Tribune edition of November 3. Happy to exult in the paper's error, he held it up for the photographers gathered at the station, as seen in this press photograph. Truman reportedly smiled and said, "That ain't the way I heard it!"Photograph credit: Byron H. Rollins

Today's featured article

Rolf Theil Endresen, who documented the Nizaa language
Rolf Theil Endresen, who documented the Nizaa language

Nizaa is an endangered Mambiloid language spoken in the Adamawa Region of northern Cameroon. Most of the language's speakers live in and around the village of Galim in the department of Faro-et-Déo. Nizaa has a complex sound system with 60 consonant phonemes, eleven tones, and a contrast between oral and nasal vowels. In terms of grammar, it is the only Bantoid language that allows multiple verbal suffixes on one verb. It also is neither a head-initial nor head-final language (the head or main element of a clause appears both before and after its modifiers with roughly equal frequency). Nizaa was first extensively documented in the 1980s by Norwegian linguists Rolf Theil Endresen (pictured) and Bjørghild Kjelsvik. The language is endangered, but the exact number of active speakers is unknown, as the last census of speakers took place in 1985, and a 1983 survey reported drastically different figures. (Full article...)

Recently featured:

Contributions

[edit]

Other things

[edit]

DYKs

Barnstars

The Sri Lankan Barnstar of National Merit
For your thorough and highly researched, as well as neutral, additions to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam article and LTTE and civil war spin offs. You are a valued and limited member of WikiProject Sri Lanka and I hope you continue for a long time to come. :) Blackknight12 (talk) 09:34, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
this WikiAward was given to Astronomyinertia by Blackknight12 (talk) on 09:34, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
The Teamwork Barnstar
Thanks for collaborating and promoting the article List of international cricket centuries by Kumar Sangakkara to a FL. Absolutely brilliant work. Dipankan (Have a chat?) 05:59, 7 July 2012 (UTC)
The Original Barnstar
Thank you for the awesome article Ridi Viharaya! Zanhe (talk) 17:52, 3 August 2012 (UTC)