English edit

Etymology edit

From German Artikel.

Noun edit

articel (plural articels)

  1. (non-native speakers' English) Misspelling of article.
    • 1994 February 26, Thorsten Altenkirch, “Abortion in Germany”, in de.soc.recht[1] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-22:
      Well, Thorsten, that's not a compromise, since it doesn't take into account one position. I will add an analogy to maker that clear.
      I should, in line with my previous articel, remark, that such a suggestion (calling the own position a compromise) is a rhetorical device which paints the other side as compromiseless hardliners.
    • 1995 July 26, Martin Rommel, “MacWEEK articel on Dante”, in comp.sys.newton.programmer[2] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-22:
      check out the latest MacWEEK articel on Dante at
      http://zcias3.ziff.com/~macweek/mw_07-24-95/newton.html
    • 1996 July 1, Andreas Zollmann, “magazines where I can publish small programs or articels about programming?”, in comp.os.msdos.programmer[3] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-22:
      Does anybody know of computer magazines in which you can publish small utility programs or articels about programming?
    • 1998 June 30, Ralf Bathel, “searching an articel in "Optical Engineering", Vol. 37, June 98”, in sci.op-research[4] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-22:
      I'm searching an articel in "Optical Engineering", Vol. 37, June 98, Issue 6, pp. 1809-1816: "Simulation of micro-optical systems with RAYTRACE" from N. Lindlein, F. Simon and J. Schwindler.
    • 2001 June 10, Gehrkens, “Instyle wonderful articel”, in alt.music.celine-dion[5] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-22:
      Do you know the magazine call Instyle. When you are a real Celine fan , you have to buy the last one of June. A wonderful articel 12 pages with wonderful photos of celine, rene , and baby renee.