This is a Wiktionary policy, guideline or common practices page. This is a draft proposal. It is unofficial, and it is unknown whether it is widely accepted by Wiktionary editors. | |
Policies – Entries: CFI - EL - NORM - NPOV - QUOTE - REDIR - DELETE. Languages: LT - AXX. Others: BLOCK - BOTS - VOTES. |
Wiktionary's readers benefit greatly from relevant links; however, some care must be taken in order to ensure maximum readability and usability. The links in Wiktionary entries mostly fall into four groups:
Different considerations apply to each of these, and they are addressed separately here.
This section is a stub. Please help by expanding it.
Topics that should perhaps be mentioned here:
{{m}}
{{l}}
, etc.(Note that some of these topics might be better covered at Wiktionary:Entry layout. Or, maybe Wiktionary:Entry layout should link here.)
Link to sister projects are encouraged, and come in three basic types: (1) in-line links in text, (2) further information links, and (3) interwiki links.
This section is a stub. Please help by expanding it.
In-line text links are included within text to relevant information on our sister projects, especially Wikipedia. There are a number of shortcuts for linking to specific projects. If Wiktionary does not have an entry for a term, especially if the term is unlikely to meet our criteria for inclusion, consider inserting a link to an appropriate Wikipedia article (or section thereof).
Some common uses of inline links include:
{{der}}
, {{inh}}
, and {{bor}}
templates can be used to provide a link to this article, and to add the appropriate categories at the same time.{{t}}
template (as well as its specialized counterparts {{t+}}
and {{t-}}
, which human editors don't need to worry about: they're managed by a bot). Use of these templates is explained in detail at Wiktionary:Translations.This section is a stub. Please help by expanding it.
Further information links include a number of templates for sister project linking. Some are boxy templates that float at the right of the page. Others are for use in bulleted lists of "external" links.
For English words, links to the English Wikipedia are valuable for fuller explanations. Headword links are the simplest. One popular approach is to include {{wikipedia}}
at the beginning of the English language section, which produces a box like the one at right, and also adds a link to the sidebar at left. Alternatively, it may be useful to have such a link in "Further reading"; the {{pedia}}
template can be used. It produces a link in the format:
and also adds a link to the sidebar. (Note that for it to appear properly as a list item, it must be preceded with an asterisk * in the wiki-code.) In all cases, links to Wikipedia should be to good articles, or to disambiguation pages that link to multiple good articles: as with all links, they should only be included if it is worthwhile for a user to follow them.
For words in other languages with Wikipedias, a similar approach may be taken; each of the above-mentioned templates takes a lang=
parameter whose value may be set to a language code controlling which Wikipedia is linked to. For example, {{pedia|lang=fi}}
would link to the Finnish Wikipedia:
Interwiki links connect entries, categories, templates and other pages on Wiktionary to their equivalents on other Wiktionary projects (such as the French Wiktionary). This is similar to how they work in Wikipedia, Wikiquote and other projects. For most users, these links display to the left of the page content in a section entitled "in other languages". The links appear as the native name of the language in which the target page is written. Unique to Wiktionary, however, is that entries of the dictionary always interwiki link to identically-named entries, e.g. mare on English Wiktionary links to mare on French Wiktionary, not to the French translation of that English word (as would have been the case in Wikipedia).
The maintenance of these links in Wiktionary changed radically in the summer of 2017. Before, the links were wikitext at the end of each page, maintained by bots. Now, entry interwiki links (to all existing identically-named entries) are created automatically by means of Mediawiki extension Cognate, while interwiki links to categories, templates and other pages (such as this one) are stored in Wikidata (just like Wikipedia's interwiki links).
To make a link in a Wiktionary article to the Wikipedia article (especially in the case where there is no Wiktionary article for the subject of the link), use this code: ].
To link to the "surfeit" Wiktionary entry from Wikipedia, you would include the wikilink markup ]
which would appear as wikt:surfeit or the wikilink markup ]
which would appear as surfeit.
This section is a stub. Please help by expanding it.
This section is a stub. Please help by expanding it.