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4:01 AM
@verbose I sorted the two that don't need any of these interrelated tags we've been discussing (one of them was mine).
Then, according to your list, just Stefan Zweig, Fraktur, Far from the Madding Crowd, Ballad of Songbirds, and maybe Narnia need , and ...
... and Hornblower needs both and .
Hmm, looking again at that Hornblower question, why does it need ? Seems like pure to me, focused on a specific set of works not about general publishing practices.
 
Would anyone mind me opening a meta asking about the differences between these tags? I'm confused, and other people will probably be confused later
 
Actually I'd ask the same thing about the Far from the Madding Crowd question, @verbose - it's not about general publishing practices but about the textual history (specifically the inclusion or not of an author) of a specific book.
Welp, now I'm disputing three of the six remaining -> proposed retags.
 
Yep, I'm opening a meta.
 
@bobble Which tags specifically? There's an old meta about the existing and :
4
Q: Tags for both [publishing] and [publication]?

Rand al'ThorWe have the following two tags which, at least from their names, seem pretty similar: publishing, 12 questions Questions about current or historical practices in publishing. publication, 11 questions For questions about the publication of a work, not the text of the work itself. Pe...

With an answer from our very own Tsundoku establishing the current usage.
 
[publishing], [textual-history], and maybe [editions]
those are the ones that y'all are re-tagging an' arguing about
 
4:09 AM
Well, is a new tag of verbose's creation, but seemingly set to replace both and .
 
replace? then why are you leaving some of those behind?
 
verbose already wrote a tag wiki excerpt for , and I'm thinking to write a tag wiki with a bunch of example types of question.
 
okay then I won't
sorry for asking
 
0
Q: How does this joke (?) of Gonff's work?

bobbleThere's a line by Gonff in Mossflower that's clearly supposed to be a joke, but I just... don't get it. Gonff was conscious of Columbine watching him. Bella had given the little mousethief permission to sing grace, and he stood up boldly and sang aloud, Squirrels, otters, hedgehogs, mice, Moles...

 
@bobble Because we haven't flooded the front page by editing them all at once? :-) Or haven't quite agreed on which ones to retag how. But our discussion in chat is covering all the questions currently tagged either or .
@bobble Why? I'm not saying don't ask, just explaining what's going on.
Maybe it's good to have a meta record of this, since it's a fairly big retagging exercise for a site of this size (might create a new 50+ tag and give verbose a Taxonomist badge overnight).
 
4:13 AM
I meant more, it seems that the plan is to tag some questions with e.g. both and
 
No, [publiSHING] and [textual-history]. The plan is to get rid of [publiCATION] entirely.
 
ah. me is confused over similar names, it seems
 
It is confusing to have two such similar tags!
 
4:37 AM
1
Q: What do superscript circles mean in poetry?

StrugglingStudent42I am reading a book on the collected works of Alexander Pope. Peppered throughout his poems are little superscript circles or degrees symbols, seen in this image of the text (transcribed below) What do these mean? So by false learning is good sense defaced: Some are bewildered in the maze of sc...

 
4:48 AM
@Mithical pokes a Mith I finally pressed the button to submit a Watership Down review, only a few months late :D
 
5:16 AM
:-D
 
5:45 AM
@Randal'Thor Guess you're right about Hornblower, no need for
@Randal'Thor But the Hardy question does ask specifically about the practice of publishing works in serial form.
@bobble Asking is always good
 
@verbose Not about the general practice, just about why that particular author didn't put his name on his submission. (Turns out the answer lay in a general practice of the magazine, but the question is about a specific story.)
 
@Randal'Thor True.
@Randal'Thor Yep, I don't see why we'd need those.
@Randal'Thor I also wrote the tag wiki info, not just the excerpt
@Randal'Thor I'd not object to a Taxidermist badge. Er, Taxonomist. A taxidermist is a person who stuffs cabs, right?
 
1
Q: In "Adventure of the Priory School", what is going on with the reward money and the cheque?

HighVoltageIn the Sherlock Holmes story "The Adventure of the Priory School", Holmes shows perhaps the most amount of interest in the reward money. Holmes initially confirms the terms of the reward with the Duke who offers it: “The fact is, your Grace,” said he, “that my colleague, Dr. Watson, and myself h...

 
@verbose Oh sorry! I missed that. Didn't click through to check, as it's so rare for anyone to write the full tag wiki, but I should've realised that was an opportunity for more verbosity than the excerpt ;-)
 
@Randal'Thor heh
 
6:01 AM
@Randal'Thor But isn't asking for a specific recommendation even of an edition opinion-based? I mean, you might like the Penguin edition for its footnotes and I might like the Oxford edition because it uses the Winchester ordering rather than the Caxton one. Someone else might like an abridged edition because it leaves out the boring or repetitive parts. So it is open-ended. — verbose 11 mins ago
@verbose Maybe you're right (maybe I'm biased because I was able to answer the question, and I did try to list objective criteria in my answer). I agree a plain "what is the best edition" would be too opinion-based, but it can be objectively answerable if the OP includes enough criteria to show exactly what they mean by "best". I remembered the Morte d'Arthur question as including more criteria than it actually does. Maybe another discussion worth having on meta?
 
@Randal'Thor Sure
 
The other edition-rec question has a deleted comment "Best for what purpose?" which inspired the OP to add their second paragraph.
 
6:13 AM
See now if that q had a header like "What are the differences between the various editions of How to Read a Book?" I would find it unobjectionable. But as it stands, I think it is clearly asking for a subjective opinion based on idiosyncratic criteria.
Meanwhile, I've answered the meta question about and , and will start listing the questions we've been discussing to my answer. Feel free to join in!
Wait, don't join in, we'd be editing the answer at the same time.
 
@verbose Yes yes, great, a bullet list of possible questions that might be asked in this tag! That's exactly what I was thinking to add in the tag wiki.
 
@Randal'Thor in the tag wiki? I just meant in the answer to the meta question
Feel free to edit the tag wiki to add whatever info you think will be helpful; rn I'm working on adding the list of all questions that need retagging to the meta question so we have a list / record.
 
I meant the list you put in the meta answer of types of questions that might be asked.
 
6:42 AM
 
6:55 AM
@CowperKettle haha
@Randal'Thor oic
Okay here's a list of questions tagged that I think should be tagged
 
7:21 AM
And one of questions tagged that I think should be tagged
 
Oh, three separate answers?
 
@Randal'Thor yeah because I worried the answer would get too long. Also, it's easier to have discussions about moving stuff from one category to another if they are in separate answers. We can always combine the answers later if it seems better to have just one.
 
Right, maybe people will want to keep one of and but not the other.
Seem to be very similar types of questions in both tags though.
10 hours ago, by Rand al'Thor
Summarising your comments on the questions that I wasn't sure about, we have, among the 31 questions with that tag, 26 which should be and just 5 others (two edition-recommendation, one pure recommendation, definition of first edition, Barnes & Noble reliability).
So your list is the same 26 plus the Morte d'Arthur edition-rec one.
22 hours ago, by verbose
• Six questions tagged [tag:publication] should have [tag:publishing] instead
• Two questions need neither [tag:publication] nor [tag:publishing]
• One needs both [publishing] and [tag:textual-history]
• Eighteen can be changed from [tag:publication] to [tag:textual-history]
And your list is that 18 (21 with Frost/Hesse which you missed at first and Allingham where you changed your mind) plus that 1 (Hornblower) plus Narnia and FftMC which I raised before, plus Fraktur ... but that makes 25 and the list is only 24.
 
7:44 AM
Oh, got it! You missed the Hesse question again.
 
7:59 AM
Okay I'm done with those three answers; one each for changes to questions currently tagged , , and . The goal is to end up with two tags, and . The latter is for all questions that are currently correctly tagged or .
 
Phew, this is a lot of work!
@verbose Your answer lists the Fraktur question twice; I think you meant to remove it from the first (big) list. And your answer missed the Barnes & Noble question.
Apart from that, our counts agree.
 
@Randal'Thor Fixed. Thanks!
Assuming we reach consensus on the categories in my answers, we have only 12 questions that will need to be bumped because of adding or removing tags. The remaining 52? can be handled by mods by merging and into
So now what? We wait a day or so to see if everybody agrees?
 
Someone has removed the tag from something. There's only 30 questions tagged with it now, not 31.
@verbose Maybe we can ping a few people to review our work, like @Tsundoku and @Mithical, to get eyeballs and meta votes quicker.
 
@Randal'Thor Sounds good. And @bobble
Maybe @PrinceNorthLæraðr if he'sn't too busy these days
 
You can't have my eyeballs, I need them.
@bobble Approved. Do you want to include a "submitted by bobble" line or leave it anonymous?
 
8:14 AM
@Mithical Too late, you already gave them away:
14 hours ago, by Mithical
@Randal'Thor 👀
 
@verbose I've upvoted your and answers, resulting from our discussion here, but haven't yet checked the tag to see if I agree with your 3rd answer.
I see you beat me to adding a clarifying comment on that 3rd answer :-)
 
@Randal'Thor k thanks. No rush, obvs
@Randal'Thor Oh I didn't realize you were planning to add one. I'd've left it to you had I known
 
@verbose No problem. I might've left it until after checking the questions myself, which would've meant a delay as I think my brain needs a break from these tags now.
 
the the never-ending story question crops up twice in my answers because it both has (wrongly, IMO) and (which needs to be changed to
 
8:45 AM
Are y'all planning to write up your favorites from last quarter? I have been having a lot of fun reading previous entries in the series and have found some gems (particularly from the years that I was not a regular here)
> April is the cruelest month, with his shoures soote
 
9:17 AM
posted on April 02, 2021

I did not expect to like Watership Down. If it hadn’t been for a kind English teacher gifting me the book, I would never have read it. Usually I read dystopias, fantasies, epic adventures. A book with some regular-looking rabbits on the cover would make me move on. How silly I was. Watership Down has dystopias (plural!), a whole in-universe set of fantasy tales, and epic adventures aplenty. T

2
 
9:54 AM
@verbose You might not discover any new gems from it this quarter, as a lot of our favourite answers might be from you :-)
 
10:08 AM
0
Q: When is the story of Dolphin Island set?

Rand al'ThorArthur C. Clarke's short novel Dolphin Island was published in 1963. It's clearly set in a somewhat "future" world, probably quite near future, but can we narrow down its temporal setting any further? Is it set in the 20th century or the 21st? When can we start referring to it (or can we already)...

 
10:45 AM
@verbose Re , I'm thinking the fingerprint question doesn't need any of these tags we're discussing - it's not about textual history any more than publishing practices. Maybe we need a tag, which could also be used for questions like this. I agree with everything else, including the implication that every question not mentioned can keep .
 
 
8 hours later…
7:09 PM
@verbose Depends? What's up?
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr verbose's answers to this meta question: literature.meta.stackexchange.com/q/1033/11259
 
I'll read it in a bit - I have Physics work right now
 
@Mithical I assumed putting "bobble" for name would automatically do that. Fine either way.
 
@bobble I already put it on meta credited to you.
 
@bobble I'd say no: it's about which characters are named, not the significance of their names.
@bobble Maybe ?
 
maybe?
when asking about the stuff behind a name the lines get blurry
 
Do you remember how many questions were tagged before your recent edits?
That tag's rocketed up the tag list recently, now more than 75.
 
No. I do remember that I managed to push onto the front page of tags
Does it matter in some way?
 
Just trying to quantify how big your tag achievements are.
 
8:19 PM
Could probably check with SEDE? At least find out how many of my edits added the tag
 
If I knew anything about coding :-) Can't write a Data.SE query to save my life, although I can call on people who can if it's important.
 
Let's see if I get can it to 100 to help with Generalist :D
 
Generalist needs 200.
100 is the threshold for tag badges.
And 50 for Taxonomist badges.
 
oh gettin' my numbers mixed up
probably can't make it to 200
 
There's three important thresholds for tag question counts.
@bobble Not now for sure, but eventually.
A small site like this needs patience for a lot of thresholds.
Puzzling and SFF took years to be Generalist eligible. I was already active on SFF when the 40th tag hit 200 questions, so it must have been at least 4.5 years after the birth of the site.
... blimey, Lit is more than 4 years old already.
Oh well, different growth rates.
 
8:24 PM
In my current might-need-name-significance search there are 440 hits. The vast majority are probably false positives, though some need other kinds of retagging ([title] etc.)
 
@bobble Hmm, that raises an interesting question: the tag name presupposes the existence of a text, but asking about a story's transition from oral to written form is much the same type of question as asking about transition from manuscript to printed form.
So I'd say yes based on what I feel to be the spirit of the tag, but no based on a pedantic reading of the tag's name.
 
ping @verbose for tag-creator's thoughts
 
Are you going to make a list of questions that might need now? :P
 
Think it's just those two currently.
@bobble I'm not satisfied with the answers to that, btw. Still holding out hope for a massively researched and detailed answer from someone like Gareth Rees.
 
8:37 PM
Do you have a bounty with no deadline set up for it?
 
I went to check that meta, thinking that I do, but nope.
 
9:08 PM
@Randal'Thor h'm I'd say yes. The question specifically asks if there's any significance to the fact that the dog is named
@Randal'Thor Yes, agreed,
@bobble I'd go with since that's the focus of the question
@bobble yes,
@Randal'Thor I think so?
@Randal'Thor oh that's flattering but @bobble had some good answers this quarter as did the usual suspects Gareth, Tsundoku, and you. Plus the person who is new (indigo child)
 
9:27 PM
@verbose So we're allowing a very broad interpretation of "textual"? I can get behind that.
 
Does the wiki or excerpt need to have a note on this?
 
@Randal'Thor I think that would be good?
 
@verbose Ooh, forgot about indigochild. Maybe I'll post a meta answer highlighting a few new users. If I can remember them all ... checks bounty history
@verbose I definitely agree the same tag should cover oral-to-written transition of a story, was just pedantically worried about "textual" in the tag name.
 
10:26 PM
22
Q: Can you rhyme words in sign language?

honestSalamiIn spoken language, patterns of vowels, consonants, and stress are used to feel the similarity of form between two words and create rhymes. Can you do the same in sign language? Also, is there sign language poetry that I could see using the patterns special to sign language?

 
ey, I edited that
 
That's fascinating: how the normal rules of poetry become completely different in the context of sign language.
 
want me to rustle up a question on it?
 
Sounds great!
Or a topic challenge proposal, even :-)
 
@Feeds A book about bunnies for Easter?
 
10:36 PM
Well, I found a document analyzing "Tree" that, uh, sorta answered all of my half-formed questions about it
 
Great, so you can ask and self-answer?
 
Maybe... I have an answer for here and for Puzzling currently in the oven.
 
11:19 PM
@Randal'Thor Should we post the original presentation of the Mahabharata suggestion as an answer?
 
11:37 PM
^ Since England was still using the Julian calendar at the time, it's not too late to wish Andrew Marvell a happy birthday.
 

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