There is much to say about her layout. It sucked until , when proposed significant portion of WT:ELE.
Unsorted material:
Then were some tearful walkouts with noisy door strikes.
Wiktionary was born on December 12, 2002 to a great family of the Wikipedias'. By a proposal by Daniel Alston and an idea by Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia. At that time there was only English Wiktionary. It was not until March 28, 2004 when her brothers and sisters started to appear. The first two siblings were Frenk and Polly. Main namespace pages were called "articles" like in Wikipedia, later they were renamed into "entries".
These are the first entry namespace revisions/pages: (oldids 1 to 10 are Wiktionary: and Wiktionary talk: namespace, most are lost revisions of the main page)
In the old days, all entry names started with a capital letter, like Wikipedia. Then Wikimedia people made her case sensitive making her no longer feel under her parents shadow!! See Wiktionary:Beer parlour/First letter capitalization for the discussion/vote created in February 2005 that made it possible.
On 30 June in 2005 now-unregistered user Conversion_script made every entry start with a lowercase. It made thousands of moves in an hour. The contributors were supposed to undo all wrongly moved pages like German
Some time in 2005 it was realized by SemperBlotto (talk • contribs) that the majority of entries had no formatting whatsoever. Connel MacKenzie (talk • contribs) created several lists, automagically, of entries missing basic types of format. These entries were "fixed" manually. Over the following years simple quoted headwords were replaced with templatized headwords. Further templates (of the old sort) were created that would generate plurals and other inflected forms.
Deceased administrator Robert Ullmann (talk • contribs) apparently had these bots constantly running from 2007 to 2010, thus playing a major role in standardizing/updating Wiktionary content in the early days:
At some point we largely used gender number-specific templates such as:
{{m}}
to return m (as in masculine gender){{f}}
returned f for feminine{{p}}
returned pl for pluralThey've been deprecated in favor of {{g}}
.
In the past we had thousands of individual language code templates like {{en}}
for English and {{ja}}
for Japanese. As a side effect, {{also}}
was created to generate a "See also:" link because {{see}}
was the template for Seneca language. The language templates were eventually deprecated in favor of Module:languages.
hewikt refugees?
Some old heated discussions:
{{l}}
vs. ] (nobody won)