This reason was intended for cases where the tag name doesn't need defining because everybody knows that it is. This isn't the case here.
And, contrariwise, once you've defined the name, it's obvious that it's for questions about that particular set of works. There's no need to say “use the-watchmen for questions that are about The Watchmen”
@Gilles It gives no usage guidance beyond defining the term and it does not state whether it should be used with questions about the series of books they are within or the characters themselves.
> Simply defining what a [tag] is rarely helps those using it unless the tag's name itself is ambiguous. Excerpts should describe why and when a tag should be used. See the help center for more guidance.
It's frustrating, but it makes sense: otherwise, the system would have to manage a series of changed proposals. What if you're reviewer #2, and you want to approve the original proposal but not the change by reviewer #1?
@HDE226868 it depends. It's better to reject a really useless initial suggestion, because that makes the tag disappear from the list of tags that lack a wiki.
@HDE226868 but typically in such scenarios the original foundation wasn't built to withstand the added weight by going higher, so you have to strip it all the way down before you can make it higher
After reading the answers to this question and this question, I see that Harper Lee put thought into her name selection in To Kill A Mockingbird and I see the logic behind those two. However, I can not come up with a remotely reasonable explanation for the name Dill. I have not done much research...
If you look at the tag wiki for the terminology tag, you'll see that it's about terms used to describe books, e.g. genre terms, the difference between a novel, novella, and short story, etc. It's not for words and phrases in literature.
@Gilles I'm not sufficiently familiar with tags in general or tags on this site to have an opinion about that, but there appears to be reason on this site to say "use in conjuction with alan-moore" in the wiki excerpt