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WWWW is an abbreviation for: * BMIbaby (IATA airline code WW) *Warrior Within *Waterworks *Weather warning *Weight Watchers *Werewolf * Winchester and Western Railroad *Wind Waker *Wonder Woman *World War *World Wind, a virtual globe developed by NASA in addition *WW (band) is an Estonian prog rock band Lists of two-letter combinations WWWwww earliest found (anonymous) edit: at one time pad, 21 Sept 01 some articles substantially edited / added to / modified: :cryptography, Enigma machine, PGP, and many related articles :diabetes mellitus, diabetes dictionary, insulin, and other related articles :philosophy of science, scientific method, history of computing hardware, Linux, ... some articles touched up for content: :list of operating systems, programming languages, Lake Wobegon, history of baseball, ... /scratch Ww==Welcome== Hello Ww, Wikipedia:Welcome, newcomers to Wikipedia. I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedia:Wikipedians. You can learn more on the Wikipedia:How to edit a page page. The Wikipedia:Naming conventions and Wikipedia:Manual of Style pages are also useful. Feel free to experiment at the Wikipedia:Sandbox. If you have any questions about the project then check out Wikipedia:Help or add a question to the wikipedia:Village pump. User:Angela ==Enimga <> stream cypher??== Hi, Ww, why are you claiming Enigma machine isn't a stream cipher? It encrypts one symbol at a time in a way which depends on the machine's internal state, which is exactly what a stream cipher is. If you are concerned that it acts on whole letters rather than bits, don't be; that distinction is practically obsolete. In fact of the 12 examples given beneath the stream cipher article, only 3 are bit-oriented. User:Securiger 09:06, 26 Feb 2004 (UTC) ==JNC on PH== Hi, not sure I completely understand what you mean by "I have a sense of the other shoe not yet hitting the floor about it" - I apologize for not responding before, there are just so many things to do on Wikipedia, I was busy elsewhere. In other words, don't read anything into my failure to reply! I just posted a reply on the PH talk page; I read your reply and agree we need to cover the theories in some detail, but I still think it ought to be a separate page. Since only Daniel disagreed (of those who have said anything), if you're OK with it, I think we should do it. User:Jnc 14:07, 18 Mar 2004 (UTC) ==logical fallacy good & Constitutional Debate of Canada== Congratulations on your rephrasing of key paragraphs in the Logical fallacy article! I wanted to clarify it as well, but it is very difficult to construct accurate sentences in a foreign language. Can I ask what is your nationality? I am looking for a non-Canadian to help out in making Constitutional debate of Canada neutral and clear for outsiders. Right now, we (well, it is mostly me) are in the process or restructuring the article (see the talk page) which used to be parts of Politics of Canada so that all visitors can make sense of it even if they are new to the subject. At this point, we just need to know if the proposed structure is understandable and neutral or if it looks obscure and/or biased. User:Mathieugp 20:16, 19 Mar 2004 (UTC) : A stranger to the debate is what we need. Ideally, more than one person would be even better. Reading French is sure helpful to dig into this contentious subject. A lot of books were written in that language by Quebecers and they were not necessarily translated to English. Nevertheless, if you would just watch the page as it evolves and point out things that seem non-neutral, vague, out of place, fallacious etc, you would be very helpful. All of us who know of the debate are biased and we know it. User:Mathieugp 21:43, 19 Mar 2004 (UTC) :: Your edits were fine, but the article is going to be rewritten completely. Currently, it looks like and accelerated history course and the headings are not very logical. There are also numerous errors. I have a proposed structure for the article here: Talk:Constitutional_debate_of_Canada. Since I conceived it and nobody showed up to participate to my discussion, I am actively seeking people to tell me if they see any bias in it. I will not start writing before that. User:Mathieugp 15:44, 22 Mar 2004 (UTC) ==CRYPTREC (mc)== Hi ww, great start at CRYPTREC. I can't make head or tails of their website; is the project ended / ongoing? Anyway, good stuff. User:Matt Crypto 17:23, 25 Mar 2004 (UTC) ==CryptoDerk's plans== Thanks for the info about crypto, I'll definitely be editing more pages in the near future, as soon as a finish off my thesis (which, of course, is about crypto). My specific area of expertise is the DLP and related stuff like ECC and HECC, so I'll likely be sticking to that. Block ciphers are not my cup of tea at all, so it'll be rare for me to edit anything like that. I'll definitely be sure to add some more books. User:CryptoDerk 16:11, Apr 1, 2004 (UTC) == Main Page design ans from Eloquence == Getting back to you regarding your comments on the new Main Page: 1) Structure. There are different opinions about what the Main Page is supposed to accomplish. Some feel it should give every visitor all the knowledge they need to become a contributor. Some feel it should showcase examples of our work. Others think that it should be a directory of articles. My design is based on two assumptions: a) We want to point users to articles that they likely want to read, b) We want to provide an incentive for people to regularly view the Main Page. Let me elaborate on these assumptions. a) The old design provided merely a catalog of links with no information as to what is behind these links. In the case of the topics directory, this approach may work, because people have a general idea as to what these topics refer to. In the case of news items, new articles, featured articles etc. this was ill-conceived, as there is little motivation for me to follow a link if the only way to get a basic idea of what is behind it is to do so. b) I only viewed the old Main Page to access other pages, hardly ever to actually read the content. I did not view it regularly. I view the new Main Page every day and follow most of its sections. Why is this difference important? If we can hook our users on our Main Page, then that is a good way to get them interested in the rest of the site. If the reader will, however, be turned away by the Main Page after following a link from somewhere else, we may lose them forever. So it is very important that our Main Page includes "hooks" to catch people, and to create a bond with the site. The information is also much more accessible this way - rather than following dozens of pages, if you want to get a digest of what's interesting on Wikipedia, you can just follow the Main Page. The old topics index is still there. In my opinion, it is mostly useless, because it gives the false impression that it is a ''directory'', when in reality it is just a list of articles, many of which do ''not'' provide a good overview of the general topic. Furthermore, thanks to our ubiquitous redirects, just entering a search term and pressing "Wikipedia:Go button" often gets you exactly where you want. When the fulltext search is back, that will be the primary way people access Wikipedia articles. I have almost never used the topics index. The Community Portal is now, in my opinion, much more useful even though there's still a lot of room for improvement. We have space on it to collect ''all'' the important Wikipedia: pages, and we can use it to inform our readers about general events of note to the ''community'' rather than just readers. Once people become interested in editing, this should be the place where they can learn everything they need to know. 2) Design. Yes, there are always trends in design and we should certainly not follow the latest trend just for the hell of it. I have studied Digital Media for four years, and I was often wildly opposed to the types of designs that were favored there. I was the only one in a room of 40 willing to stand up and say: "This design is crap. The user can't find anything there." So while I understand where you're coming from, I resent the claim that the new Main Page is somehow an expression of fashion, conscious or unconscious. I sat down and designed it (on paper at first) based on ideas that were previously thrown around in the community. If you wanted "the latest fad", the Main Page would consist of a Flash intro, after which you would get a JavaScript based button navigation with the function of the buttons only visible when you move your mouse over them. It would all look very nice but be completely useless. I added images not because images are fancy, but because they transport ''emotions''. And I think therein lies one cause of the problem. Many people are opposed to any design that works with emotions. However, I believe this to be necessary if the information that we transport is actually to be memorized and usefully processed. This is how memory works - by connecting information with emotional encoding. Intellectuals can generate these encodings from the smallest bits of information, but most people require a trigger, typically of a visual nature. As an encyclopedia we can choose to write strictly for ourselves or for our readers. The new Main Page is designed to accomplish the latter.User:Eloquence 04:52, Apr 3, 2004 (UTC) ==use stubs (isomorphic)== Hi. Thanks for all the stuff you're adding on cryptography, but could you make a little more attempt at formatting on the stubs you create? It won't really add much work for you and it'll save others from having to clean up after you. Especially, don't leave messages in the article itself about what needs to be added. Put that on the talk page. User:Isomorphic 17:58, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC) :Well, I'm pretty sure the official position is that you should use the talk page for such things. If you really don't want to use the talk pages, there is one other option that's still much better than inserting a message directly into the article. The Wikipedia markup language allows comments to be made in the code without appearing in the article. The format for this is User:Jdforrester User_talk:Jdforrester 20:59, 25 May 2004 (UTC) ---- Hi, I've replied on my talk page. User:Arvindn 03:15, 2 Jun 2004 (UTC) == Resolution on cipher vs cypher (and NSA)... == ww -- I was hoping we could finish off our cypher vs cipher discussion (Wikipedia:WikiProject Cryptography/Cipher vs Cypher), seeing as how no additional comments have been forthcoming for a while. I was particularly hoping for a response to the "Can we agree on what to do?" section, the gist of the proposal being that since it seems "mostly harmless" to yourself, yet others think it is important, there's little cost to yourself to standarise. On a related note, I was surprised to see your changes to Eli Biham and PGP, changing "the NSA" to "NSA". In Talk:National Security Agency you appear to be advocating standardising the articles, ''Thus, among us cryptiacs (or cryptonauts?), and in articles on same, it should be NSA, no 'the'.''. This seems at least a little at odds with your various arguments about accepting usage variations in the English language.. User:Matt Crypto 15:42, 9 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::Matt, I waited for a while to respond to your can we agree on what to do section as we two are not the only participants. Indeed, I have twice tried to respond (the time for waiting having been sufficient by some vague standard) but have lost the edit in both cases. WP has been up and down of late... I'll try again. ::On the revision at Biham, I was trying for a more historically relevant account of how it was that it became known that diff crypt had been discovered at least twice before. The historical sequence is as I have left it; the edit summary could accomodate only a brief comment which seems to have been a bit confusing. ::As for the other, it's not an inconsistency in my position. For ''the NSA'' or ''NSA'' only, ''the NSA'' really does ring quite clearly wrong in some circumstances. I've tried to develop an explanation of this at talk:NSA, but as you might guess from that none seems quite compelling even to me. ::Does it not ring equally wrong in some cases to your ear? Albeit yours is a BE ear? On this, because of the clear wrong ring, I think there is less room for debate, though this being English, I'm absolutely confident there will be some, as there has been. ::: To my ear, just "NSA" rings wrong, and "the NSA" seems correct; there's plenty of room for debate, e.g. Schneier uses both forms in ''Applied Cryptography'' (e.g. p597-599, 2nd ed, if you have it). Equally, "block cypher" looks hideous to my eye. Having said that, I would stress that I don't think we should go by what we ''feel'' to be correct, but follow what is actually used in various writings. I do think this is an inconsistency in your position, though, because you simply declare that ''the NSA'' "really does ring quite clearly wrong", yet argue that we should tolerate both "cipher" and "cypher" because English has lots of variation. User:Matt Crypto 21:15, 9 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::::Matt, Have to disagree about the inconsistency. In the one case we have the language itself (perhaps) changing -- Sassure's 'parole'. On the other we have a coding issue from sound (leaving out accentual effects on the orthography) to a written representation. I don't know that the language itself is changing and I don't know any way even in theory to even reach more of an awareness of what's happening than I (or you) have already. In the other, it's arbitrary, albeit without a rational system in place (or an Academy to issue eidts) how to settle the arbitrary is harder. ::::I'm surprised that your ear doesn't hear something odd about the NSA. Maybe it's an AE shift that we (I) are sensing seismically deep in wherever languages change. Fascinating, and as I note below, a very odd feeling. User:Ww 13:53, 10 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::::: I guess I perceive inconsistency, as the arguments that you give to variation in spelling also, it would appear to me, apply also to variation in "NSA" vs "the NSA" — I don't think you've yet mentioned the reason for a distinction. But I don't particularly want to discuss that, but rather I was hoping that you might reflect on your desire to standardise on "NSA" over "the NSA" — based on (what seems to be) just your preference — and understand why people might wish to use "cipher" instead of "cypher" — based on what's used overwhelmingly frequently in modern cryptography. User:Matt Crypto 16:21, 10 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::::::Matt, Let me try again, then. What is a language? It is, obviously, a collection of vacabulary (different (more or less) than other languages) together with a notional codebook mapping vocabulary to meaning (in a complex multitudinously self referential way) and some rules for structure (grammar and such). So far, so (probably) not very controversial. The controversial part begins when we try to get any closer to any of these elements in any particular case, say the assorted English pluperfect (imperfect, sort of perfect, really not perfect, ...) tenses. ::::::For a long time, until Sassure (mentioned here and there in some of my comments on this issue), what test one might apply to determine whether this word or this usage pattern (ie, grammatical construct) was part of a language was not really too clear. Consider such border problems as the edge of the Danelaw for determining what was Anglo-Saxon or not, or Alsace and Lorraine for much of their histories, or the similar border through what is now Belgium for French v Nederlands, or ... Sassure claimed that the test was parole, ie what is actually found in the wild (like computer or other viruses, sort of) among fluent speakers of a language. Thus, my opinions on whether this or that is properly a part of Gaelic (any flavor) are incompetent. I can't speak a lick of any of them. But I speak a bit of French (about 1 bit just like a typical monoglot AE speaker) and might have an opinion on some question of French usage. But, by Sassure's criterion, I'd still be irrelevant as I'm hardly fluent. And some agent of the l'Academy would probably extremely sanction me (ie, fatally) if I dared. Cowardice forbids. And so it is that, if this account of language's nature makes sense to you, the Miss Fidditches of the world are permanently irrelevantly babbling to the extent they refuse to acknowledge that the textbook is at best an approximation. ::::::Since fluent speakers occasionally (!) disagree on what is (or is not) proper usage or vocabulary, what a language is is a bit indeterminate. Which neatly explains how it is that a language can change, as for instance English (or various proto versions of it) has so persistently done. Just change what the fluent speakers think is right. Or find a new group of fluent speakers (as happens in creoles), and what they speak becomes a new language. It's something of a non explicit, unconscious, never quite called for a vote, hard to watch, ... kind of plurality rules thing. How it is that this happens is mysterious, but it certainly does. If most (and we're not talking a (50% + 1) majority here, but something rather larger and hard to pin down) fluent speakers of English accepted awful as meaning full of awe than it would be an appropriate word for a reaction to, say, St Paul's. On the other hand, if most (in this same sense) took awful to mean really truly horrid, then it presumably wouldn't apply to St Paul's (modulo architectural taste, of course). The word (however it's written) has actually been used both ways within historical times, I understand. One use seems to me to be a misuse, but I'm now well on the other side of the divide. Many words in Shakespeare have changed meanings in similarly significant ways, one of the reasons Shakespeare's intent in this or that passage is less than limpidly clear today. Corruption of text, lousy note taking, publisher 'improvements', editor follies, ... all contribute of course as well. Thus far, we're talking about something happening within our joint brains. This is (if you think Chomsky's on to anything at all) not arbitrary in any sense, but a reflection (some levels of indirection on) of physiology or inherited wiring patterns or some mysterious such. My participation in such determinations is obscure, not easily noticed, and I'm fascinated, if only occasionally able to watch. It's the possibility that ''the NSA'' v ''NSA'' is such a thing that's so interesting, and the reason I'm interested in what your (BE) ear hears. ::::::Spelling, on the other hand, is merely an arbitrary englyphment of the sounds used (approximately and ignoring accents). We would still have the English language in exact full if it were written using Tengwar, or one of the developments of the Brahmi script, or han gul, or in katakana. My sense of participation in the insanity of English spelling is at best bemusing, and mostly maddening, unlike that noted above. You've noticed how my fingers have decided to wash their hands of the whole matter? Who determines what is the ''correct'' mapping (or, in English, the mishmash mapping) between sound and glyphs is not at all obvious. In English it's certainly not any sort of consistent phonetic scheme. It's not you nor me, and it's not majority vote either (at least going by the history of English spelling), nor is it merely that the experts use this spelling (however crudely coerced by their editors), as the only 'neutral' authorities we have (the dictionary compilers) retain variants for extended periods. ::::::Does this clear up the conflation in your mind? User:Ww 14:27, 11 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::::::: I'm afraid I'm going to have to be honest and say "not entirely"... ;-) From what I can gather, you're saying that ''language'' tends to standardise itself to a large degree and that ''spelling'' remains fuzzy. Well, bringing it back to our specific discussion, I would ask you to consider again a point which you've already agreed: the spelling "cipher" is used overwhelmingly more frequently than "cypher" in modern cryptography. The current standings are about thirty books to zero, and (if I could be bothered to list them) hundreds (thousands, probably) of academic papers to, well, almost zero. Yes, there's divergence of spelling for other words: "colour" vs "color", "spelt" vs "spelled" and so on, but our case, "cipher" vs "cypher", in the context of modern cryptography? An agreement seems to have evolved — Wikipedia should mimic that agreement. User:Matt Crypto 15:52, 11 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::::::::Matt, Enough ':'? I'm afraid I have to agree with your "not entirely". I'm not at all sure 'language' does anything at all (there's distorting reification here, lurking like recumbent cats in a dark hallway tripping us all), but rather its fluent practicioners do (more or less jointly) something that we can sort of observe. What's going on and how it happens and how speakers cooperate in doing so is the fascinating (and almost entirely unknown) bit. At least I think it's fascinating. But whatever is happening, Sassure's point is that to define as language anything else (specifically including the written variants thereof) is to miss the point. It's in that arena that the ''the NSA'' v ''NSA'' thing is happening, if anything is. I still feel a virtual itch surrounding this usage, despite some weeks of having it in the foreground of my thoughts. As for the spelling thing, let me get back to a reply to you at the cy v ci discussion. I'm loosing the : here! User:Ww 16:22, 11 Jun 2004 (UTC) ::I think here we are encountering an actual case of parole (in the Sassurian sense) trumping school lessons on perceived (wrongly in this case) correct practice. It's a very odd feeling to become aware of this happening in one's head. I've seen it happen, after the fact, in regard to much slang terminology (of course examples have just fallen out of my left ear!), but I had no sense of being involved personally. I feel at one with Chaucer and Shakespeare and Pope and Jefferson in this case -- well at least a microscopic amount. ::Thanks for including the new snake oil article in list of crypto topics -- you beat me to it by moments, it seems, for it was done when I got there. And for moving snake oil it to the paren'd title, I was waiting for Jorge to respond before even attempting to do so, as will be apparent from my note in the Talk page. User:Ww 16:23, 9 Jun 2004 (UTC) == How to add something to a category == ww -- to add an entry for an article to a category page, you insert a "Category" tag into the text of that article itself; e.g. inserting :Category:WikiProjects at the end of WikiProject Cryptography. User:Matt Crypto 20:26, 9 Jun 2004 (UTC) == Response to welcome (decrypt3) == Hi ww, I'm just acknowledging your welcome to WikiProject Crypto, with thanks. As to the cipher-cypher debate, on my user page you'll also note that I'm half American and half Japanese, so my American side puts me firmly in the "cipher" camp! (My Japanese side doesn't really care.) I can't think of anything I can add to the debate, so I'm staying silently on the "cipher" side. Once again, thanks for the welcome. --User:Decrypt3 20:52, Jun 11, 2004 (UTC) == cy v ci == I'm not fluent in Japanese, unfortunately, but I can tell you a few things. It's almost completely standardized throughout Japan. Of course there are regional dialects, but they affect primarily spoken language, not written. For what you were saying about the relationship between sounds and glyphs... there are about a zillion kanji that can be pronounced "ki", but if you're wanting to say "tree", only one of them is correct. Additionally, a lot of them can be pronounced as something other than "ki" depending on their context. I do speak Flemish (Belgian dialect of Dutch) adequately, however. I've gone and added notes on pronunciation to the Rijndael page. And like the Japanese regional dialects, Flemish deviates from Dutch primarily in the oral aspect, not written. Dutch tends to be faster and more guttural. Flemish speakers also roll their r's, whereas Dutch speakers don't. --User:Decrypt3 18:15, Jun 12, 2004 (UTC) :I guess I misunderstood you the first time. There is a one-to-one correspondence between Hiragana and Katakana. All of the Kana are distinct from each other, except for two pairs: "shi" and "chi", with the ''dakuten'' (the little marks that turn "ta" to "da", for example), are the same sound - "ji", as well as "su" and "tsu" with dakuten both being "zu". However, there are rules that determine which to use when there is a "ji" or "zu" sound. See Hiragana for details. The Romaji are also in one-to-one correspondence with the Kana, like the Romaji as I've used here. == WikiReader Cryptography == ww -- another cunning scheme: a Wikipedia:WikiReader/Cryptography, a collection of cryptography articles gleaned from Wikipedia. It'd be great to have your suggestions. User:Matt Crypto 20:24, 12 Jun 2004 (UTC) ==WikiProject Crypto== I thank you for the invitation, but I'll stay outside for a while -- most of my edits were requested categorization I did, and crypto is not my main interest. I find it hard to contribute, since our crypto articles have such high standard, so I don't think there is a topic I can cover. Kudos to all-you crypto writers and good luck! User:Sverdrup 15:50, 21 Jun 2004 (UTC) :Now I've seen the notice; my watchlist is growing past the unusable, so I missed it earlier. I'm not too serious about apologising, note the smiley :-), no worries. User:Sverdrup 15:24, 28 Jun 2004 (UTC) ==Emmett Watson...== At last -- why didn't I think of him? :-) I know what you mean about being tormented by not recalling this kind of thing. Sorry, btw, that I haven't helped much more with crypto. Is there an article you want me to set my limited layman's eye to, or are things moving along nicely? Thanks for your note while I was away -- I appreciated it, and it helped remind me of why I like it here. Obviously it worked -- I'm back and happy again. :-) User:Jwrosenzweig 20:07, 22 Jun 2004 (UTC) == Informing wider community == ww - I thought I'd advertise the WikiReader Cryptography plans a little tonight (well, tonight for me...); does the proposed article page look OK? (P.S. "cipher" vs "cypher"? *grin*) User:Matt Crypto 20:00, 24 Jun 2004 (UTC) : (I've replied at User talk:Matt Crypto) User:Matt Crypto 20:14, 24 Jun 2004 (UTC) ww - I don't suppose you'd mind signing your comments on the WikiReader page? Helps keep track. I was also hoping you might be able to add your own "numerical" score to the summary table, or is that just too much complexity / hassle? User:Matt Crypto 21:03, 24 Jun 2004 (UTC) : (I've replied to some things at User talk:Matt Crypto). Is the summary table OK? It would be very useful to maintain, as you could glance at it and see what people thought about various articles, but if it's too much hassle for people to edit / update it, then we're probably better off without. User:Matt Crypto 15:44, 25 Jun 2004 (UTC) ----- (I've replied at User talk:Matt Crypto) User:Matt Crypto 16:23, 1 Jul 2004 (UTC) == PaX FA Discussion == Could you take another peek at PaX and elaborate a bit more on the FAC page about your objections? :) I've moved the "Why PaX is signficiant" section to the top, which starts off by simply stating that PaX turns most security attacks into DoS attacks, with a short explaination of exactly what that really means. Also, I removed "most" as used in the first sentence of that section and replaced with "many;" really, there's only a handfull of software packages that are still exploitable with PaX in place, but I would rather be more conservative about this and not go yelling on the wiki that PaX can catch damn near 100% of everything. In my experience, it gets damn close: http://www.cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvekey.cgi?keyword=format+string AFAIK that is the only class of attack which PaX can't catch :) That list only ever gets bigger; it doesn't lose items just because a software package was fixed. --User:Bluefoxicy 01:07, 15 Jul 2004 (UTC) == re2 PaX comment == Sure I'm willing to put up with limited help :) It's always great to see someone willing to help rather than cheer from the sidelines (like I do normally). First off, what do you see wrong with the structure as is now? It's best to work with the majors first: Section order, missing or false (I shouldn't have anything false) information, unneeded cruft that just confuses the reader. After that's all good, concerns about minor bits of wording are worth raising. --User:Bluefoxicy 19:33, 17 Jul 2004 (UTC) == WikiProject Cryptography mailshot == Hi, quick note to let you know about what's happening with the Wikipedia:WikiReader/Cryptography. There's now a provisional Table of Contents to work with, and for the next 68 days or so there'll be an "Article of the Day" scheme: each day there'll be a particular article highlighted for reviewing and fixing. There's two templates for this purpose: Template:WikiReaderCryptographyAOTD and Template:WikiReaderCryptographyAOTD-Verbose. The smaller one looks like this: These articles are likely to be some of the earliest English Wikipedia content to get turned into a print version, and any help in making them as good as possible would be much appreciated. Thanks! User:Matt Crypto 01:48, 29 Jul 2004 (UTC) ==Constitution et al== Hi. I haven't had a chance to look at that yet; thank you very much for reminding me. As for the Constitution, Emsworth says he found several factual errors, esp. in the Bill of Rights section. I suspect it's the history, but I'm not sure--would you mind doing a quick review? Thanks very much; I'm not sure what's wrong, but hopefully it will get fixed, because once we get the facts down, I think it's definitely featured article material. Best, User:Meelar_ See other meanings of words starting from letter: WWA | WB | WC | WD | WE | WF | WG | WH | WI | WJ | WK | WL | WM | WN | WO | WP | WR | WS | WT | WU | WX | WY | WZ |Words begining with Ww: WW WW Ww Ww Ww/scratch Ww09ww.jpg WW1 Ww1 Ww1-elephant.jpg Ww1.jpg WW1and2_British_Grenades WW1rib.jpg WW1_2BritishGrenades Ww1_battle.jpg WW1_British_light_tank.jpg WW1_mine_dump_at_Inverness.jpg WW1_Western_Front_at_Nieuport.jpg WW2 Ww2 WW2Theatre WW2Theatre WW2Theatre Ww2_03.jpg Ww2_131.jpg Ww2_142.jpg Ww2_157.jpg Ww2_158.jpg WW2_aircraft_production WW2_Brit_Comm_Infantry_Guns WW2_Finland_flag.JPG WW2_Iwo_Jima_flag_raising.jpg WW2_Iwo_Jima_flag_raising.jpg WW2_Japonese_Surrender_USS-Missouri.jpg WW2_people WW2_planes WW2_politics Ww2_weapons WW3 Ww6q Wwahammy Wwai Wwake Wwaker.jpg WWaldorfAstorII.jpg Wwallace.jpg WWAN WWASP WWASPS WWAY-TV Wwbox.jpg WWBT WWBT-TV WWC WWC Wwcarpen WWCD WWD Wwdb Wwdb Wwdb_name Wwdb_name WWDC WWDC-FM WWDC-FM WWDC_(radio) WWDC_2005.jpg WWDE-FM WWDV WWE Wwe Wwe.JPG WWEchampions Wwedorbox.jpg WWEEurochampions Wweewq Wwefreakout WWEHeavyweight WWEICchampions WWELightHchampions Wwelogo.jpg WWELWChampions WWEplaque_700.jpg WWEstatue_700.jpg WWETagchampions WWEUSchampions WWEV WWEV-FM Wwewmlogo.jpg WWEWomenschampions WWE_24/7 WWE_Afterburn WWE_Armageddon WWE_Babe_of_the_Year WWE_Backlash WWE_Backlash WWE_Bad_Blood WWE_Bottom_Line WWE_Champion WWE_Champions WWE_Championship WWE_Championship WWE_championship WWE_Cruiserweight_Champion WWE_Cruiserweight_Championship WWE_Day_of_Reckoning WWE_Day_of_Reckoning_2 WWE_Draft_Lottery WWE_European_Champion WWE_European_Championship WWE_European_Championship WWE_Experience WWE_Films WWE_get_the_f_out.jpg WWE_Hall_of_Fame WWE_Hardcore_Champion WWE_Hardcore_Championship Wwe_ic_belt.jpg WWE_Intercontinental_Champion WWE_Intercontinental_Championship WWE_Judgement_Day WWE_Judgment_Day WWE_Kane WWE_Light-Heavyweight_Championship WWE_Light_Heavyweight_Championship WWE_New_Year's_Revolution WWE_New_Years_Revolution WWE_No_Mercy WWE_No_Way_Out WWE_Over_The_Edge WWE_Over_the_Edge_1999 Wwe_over_the_edge_1999 WWE_PPV WWE_RAW WWE_RAW WWE_RAW_Gold_Rush_Tournament WWE_Royal_Rumble WWE_Smackdown Wwe_smackdown WWE_SmackDown! Wwe_smackdown! WWE_SmackDown!_(video_game) WWE_SmackDown!_Here_Comes_the_Pain WWE_SmackDown!_Here_Comes_the_Pain WWE_Smackdown!_vs._Raw WWE_Smackdown_(game) WWE_SmackDown_(game).jpg WWE_SummerSlam WWE_Sunday_Night_Heat WWE_Superstars WWE_Tag-Team_Champion WWE_Tag-Team_Championship WWE_Tag-Team_Championships Wwe_tag_team.jpg WWE_Tag_Team_Championship WWE_Tough_Enough WWE_Undispited_Championship WWE_Undisputed_Championship WWE_Unforgiven WWE_United_States_Championship WWE_US_Championship WWE_Velocity WWE_Vengeance WWE_Women's_Champion WWE_Women's_Championship WWE_WomensChampion WWE_World_Heavyweight_Championship WWE_World_Tag-Team_Champion WWE_World_Tag-Team_Championship WWE_World_Tag-Team_Championships WWE_World_Tag_Team_chamiopship WWE_World_Tag_Team_Champion WWE_World_Tag_Team_Championship WWE_World_Tag_Team_championship WWE_WrestleMania WWE_Wrestlemania_21 WWE_WrestleMania_X8 WWE_WrestleMania_XIX WWE_Wrestlemania_XIX WWE_WrestleMania_XIX_box.jpg WWF WWF Wwfmike WWF_(wildlife) WWF_(wrestling) WWF_Championship WWF_European_Championship WWF_Hall_of_Fame WWF_Hardcore_Championship WWF_Intercontinental_Championship WWF_Light_Heavyweight_Championship WWF_No_Mercy WWF_Over_The_Edge WWF_Undisputed_Championship WWF_Undisputed_Title WWF_Undisputed_Title WWF_Women's_Championship WWF_World_Heavyweight_Title WWF_World_Tag_Team_Championship WWF_WrestleMania_2000 Wwhatsup Wwheeler Wwheeler Wwheinz WWHO WWHS.jpg Wwhyte WWI WWI-stub WWI-stub WWIAFVs WWIBallonBadge.jpg Wwicko WWIeralady.jpg WWII WWII-stub WWII:_War_of_Supremacy WWIIAmericanAFVs WWIIBritishAFVs WWIIBritishAFVs WWIIBritishAFVs2 WWIIBritishCommGuns WWIIFrenchAFVs WWIIGermanAFVs WWIIGermanAFVs WWIIGermanAFVs/Foreign_vehicle_debate WWIIGermanAFVs/Foriegn_vehicle_debate WWIIGermanInfWeapons WWIIHistory WWIII WWIII WWIII_(album) WWIII_(album) WWIII_Live_2003 WWIINavyNav.jpg WWIIObBadges.jpg WWIISovietAFVs WWIITheatre WWIITheatre WWIIUSInfWeaponsNav WWIIWesternDesertCampaign WWII_Aircraft WWII_aircraft Wwii_casualties WWII_evacuation WWII_maps WWII_maps_(Europe) WWII_Memorial_and_Lincoln_Memorial.jpg WWII_Memorial_Atlantic.jpg WWII_Memorial_Atlantic_fountain.jpg WWII_memorial_construction.jpg Wwii_memorial_construction_1.376.jpg Wwii_memorial_construction_1.677.jpg WWII_Memorial_Pacific.jpg WWII_Memorial_Pacific_fountain.jpg WWII_memorial_right.jpg WWII_memorial_stars.jpg WWII_memorial_wide.jpg Wwii_normandy_american_cemetary.jpg Wwii_normandy_american_cemetary.jpg Wwii_normandy_american_cemetary_aerial.jpg WWII_phonetic_alphabet WWII_Schweinfurt_Raid.jpg WWII_Soviet_AFV_production WWII_Soviet_tank_production WWilson.JPG WWIMemorialCK.jpg WWIN WWITrenchcoat.jpeg WWIV WWI_Aircraft Wwi_aircraft WWI_Aviation Wwi_casualties WWI_concrete_ship.jpg Wwi_flight WWI_hospital_train_interior.jpg WWI_hospital_train_interior.jpg Wwi_in_the_air WWI_parachute_flare.jpg Wwi_planes WWI_Poster_Rumania.jpg WWI_US_hospital_train.jpg WWI_US_hospital_train.jpg WWJ WWJ-AM WWJ-TV WWJD WWJD WWJD.jpg Wwjdd Wwjdd Wwjdom WWJ_(AM) WWK Wwkayak_playboating.jpg WWL WWL-TV WWLP WWLP-TV WWL_(AM) WWM Wwmpgbox.jpg WWMT WWMX WWN WWNC WWNY WWO Wwo Wwoods Wwoods Wwoods/archive_2004 Wwoods/Balao_class_page_template Wwoods/Buckley_class_destroyer_escort_page_template Wwoods/Fletcher_class_destroyer_page_template Wwoods/math_alignment Wwoods/Perry_class_frigate_page_template Wwoods/Principia149 Wwoods/ship_index_page_template WWOOF Wwoof WWOOFer WWOOFing Wwop.jpg WWOR WWOR-TV WWOR.jpg WWOZ WWP WWPB WWPR WWPR-AM WWPR-FM WWPR-FM WWRR_Renda_Tower WWS Wws-robertson-hall.jpeg WWSB Wwsb.JPG Wwscoter12.JPG WWSG-TV WWSI-TV WWSI_Tower WWTBAM Wwtbox.jpg WWTC WWTC-AM WWTC_(AM) WWTNS.JPG Wwto2 WWT_Arundel WWT_Caerlaverock WWT_Castle_Espie Wwt_london.600px.jpg WWT_London_Wetlands_Centre WWT_Martin_Mere WWT_National_Wetlands_Centre WWT_Slimbridge WWT_Washington WWT_Welney WWU Wwu.jpg WWV WWVA Wwva WWVA-FM WWVA-FM WWVA_(AM) WWVB WWVB WWVH WWVH WWVZ WWW Www Www-data Www.419eater.com Www.amazon.com Www.arXiv.org Www.Baileysbooks.co.uk Www.bandbaja.org Www.bedehi.com Www.chowk.com Www.chowk.com Www.chowk.com. Www.co.summit.co.us Www.DarwinAwards.com Www.ebay.co.uk Www.ebay.com Www.freshmeat.net Www.getlost.com Www.godlovesfags.com Www.google.com Www.iscmns.org Www.jpfo.org Www.jpfo.org Www.karupspc.com Www.microsoft.com Www.mikekaplan.com/nss-folder/pictures/gorilla_2_bronx_801.jpg Www.Mug_Shots.com_R._Kelly.JPG Www.nytimes.com Www.pitchshifter.com Www.pitchshifter.com Www.pitchshifter.com_album_cover.jpg Www.pogo.com Www.rinkworks.com Www.sxc.hu Www.theinquirer.net Www.thingsthatdontexist.com Www.tism.wanker.com Www.tism.wanker.com Www.wikinfo.org Www.wikipedia.com Www.wikipedia.com/Ou_(disambiguation) Www.worldsocialism.org.jpg Www.worldsocialism.org.jpg Www.xanga.com/premium Www.yahoo.com Www/en2_split Wwwacky Wwways Wwways WWWB WWWB-TV WWWC WWWF WWWF_Tournament_of_Champions Wwwillly Wwwimg.jpg WWWonNeXTScreen.jpg WWWQ WWWQ WWWQ-FM WWWQ-FM WWWQ_(FM) WWWQ_(FM) Wwwrrr Wwwthreads Wwwwangtao Wwwwikipediaeditordotcom Wwwwolf Wwwwolf WWW_Art WWW_browser WWW_browser_cookie WWW_client WWW_cookie WWW_site Www_stormfront_org WWW_stubs WWW_UA Www_usda_gov_Acceptence_Test_for_Digital.pdf WWW_user_agent WWW_Virtual_Library Wwylon WWZZ WW_1 WW_2 WW_I WW_II Ww_norton Ww_soccer_saturn.jpg |
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