Ẹ káàbọ̀ o! edit

Ẹ káàbọ̀ o, Oniwe! Welcome to Wiktionary! I've left our standard welcome message below, as it has some links you may find useful. Following it, I've added some important information when it comes to editing Yorùbá entries just so that everything is clear and concise.

Welcome!

Hello, welcome to Wiktionary, and thank you for your contributions so far.

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These links may help you familiarize yourself with Wiktionary:

  • Entry layout (EL) is a detailed policy documenting how Wiktionary pages should be formatted. All entries should conform to this standard. The easiest way to start off is to copy the contents of an existing page for a similar word, and then adapt it to fit the entry you are creating.
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Editing Yorùbá entries:

  • When at all possible, make sure to add tones in the headword line but not in the page title, with whatever template is being used. Ex: {{yo-noun|bábà}} for "bábà" or {{yo-verb|rọra}} for "rọra.", like you've already have been doing. Mid-tone is unmarked, except in cases of a syllabic nasal such as in "gban̄gba." However, underdots with ẹ, ọ, & ṣ, must be in the page title, so for example with kọ̀ǹpútà, the page title is "kọnputa" while the headword line is {{yo-noun|kọ̀ǹpútà}}. See more here: Wiktionary:About_Yoruba.
  • Capitalization only occurs with proper nouns, such as a name (Olúwafúnkẹ́), place (Òǹdó) or important thing (Yorùbá). Otherwise, the page title must be in lowercase and the headers must match that.
  • For entries that have multiple unrelated words with different spellings, they go under different etymology headers, even if the etymologies are unknown: Etymology 1, Etymology 2, etc. See agbọn for an example.
  • This one isn't as important, but just to ease things a bit, since we now have a working pronunciation template at {{yo-IPA}}, we can now safely add pronunciation sections to each entry. The way it works is pretty easy:
    {{yo-IPA|Yorùbá}} produces: IPA(key): /jō.ɾù.bá/.
Just put the word into the template and it spits out the IPA transcription automatically. The only exception you should worry about is in the case of loanwords like Náíjà that don't follow the typical pronunciation. With those all you need to do instead is put "loan=1" in the next part of the template as such:
{{yo-IPA|Náíjà|loan=1}} produces IPA(key): /ná.í.d͡ʒà/ instead of IPA(key): /nã́.ĩ́.d͡ʒà/
These pronunciations go under the "Pronunciation" header right after the etymology section of each word.
  • This one you especially don't have to do, but I've personally been following the low-tone -> mid-tone -> high-tone ordering of entries with multiple etymologies, but even I'm on the fence about it (might switch to the opposite but TBD) (changed my mind based on readings and the sorting sequence that's used on Windows), but for now, feel free to sort them how you please.

That was a ton of info, but I hope that you continue editing on Wiktionary and helping out with Yorùbá entries! It's an initiative that I'm extremely excited about and can't wait to see the number of entries and information expand on the website. If you have any questions at all feel free to ping me or @ me with a question, and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.

Again, welcome and thank you so much for helping out! AG202 (talk) 02:57, 31 August 2021 (UTC)Reply

Àwọn orírun-ọ̀rọ̀ (Etymologies) edit

Ẹ kúuṣẹ́ o! Thank you once again for helping out with the Yorùbá entries, definitely have learned a ton, and we're on our way to making a serious and solid Yorùbá presence on Wiktionary. Just a few quick things about etymologies and the etymology section in general: when it comes to borrowings, outside of examples like Rọ́ṣíà coming from Russia, it's always best to double check with a dictionary from that language, and if possible, cite where you got the information from. For example, with the word tòlótòló, I saw that the Global Yoruba Lexical Database had it cited as coming from Hausa, and so just to make sure, I also checked a Hausa dictionary to make sure the word exists, which it does. It's safer that way to make sure that there aren't any misunderstandings.

A few more quick things: I think you've picked up on this already, but remember that the header for "Related terms" is written as such, not "Related Names" or "Related Terms". It's a bit of a strict rule, so I'd just remember to keep in it mind. And then, for alternative spellings, it should be "Alternative forms". When inputting an affix for the etymology section, remember to put the dash with the affix, ex: {{affix|ò-|tìtọ́|t1=nominalizing prefix|t2=to last, to have a lasting effect}}, so that it can properly categorize the word. Also, I'd make sure to bookmark Wiktionary's entry layout guide to know the general guidelines for making an entry (I still reference it pretty much every other day while editing).

Keep up the good work and if you have any questions, comments, or concerns feel free to ping me or @ me or reply to this, and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. AG202 (talk) 20:41, 2 October 2021 (UTC)Reply

Thank you so much, Ẹ ṣé! Oniwe (talk) 20:46, 2 October 2021 (UTC)Reply

Headword templates edit

You've been leaving these out on a number of entries. Don't. They're required for every part-of-speech section- at the very least. Without them the entry gets left out of part-of-speech categories like Category:Yoruba verbs, and important information is missing, like the tones mentioned above. Chuck Entz (talk) 23:56, 25 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

Apologies, I'm not doing it on purpose (of course) I'll go back and check the ones that I have removed them from. Thanks for letting me know Oniwe (talk) 00:58, 26 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

Contacting edit

Would like to contact you somehow concerning certain sources/works which you have cited in your reference list in some of your contributions. How do I do that Bàbá Onîwé? Oramfe (talk) 19:00, 23 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

Hi, you can contact me at remilenationstates@gmail.com. Oniwe (talk) 01:47, 14 November 2023 (UTC)Reply