If a <span class="searchmatch">username</span> exists but has no evidence of use, why not allow it to be usurped as in Wikipedia (See)?--BewareofDoug(talk • contribs) 19:01, 29 August...
What about a <span class="searchmatch">change</span> in <span class="searchmatch">username</span>? If the requisite number of votes can have been done by either <span class="searchmatch">username</span>, then this should be made clear in the proposal...
<span class="searchmatch">usernames</span> as these hinder discussions. It is acceptable to have an illegible user name if you have a legible signature; you must <span class="searchmatch">change</span> an <span class="searchmatch">username</span> considered...
Just a missing word "are": "...given set of <span class="searchmatch">usernames</span> are or ___ not connected to a specific..." - Cheers, Facts707 (talk) 21:50, 10 May 2021 (UTC) @Chuck...
bother you but there is a backlog of several weeks at Wiktionary:<span class="searchmatch">Changing</span> <span class="searchmatch">username</span>. This is a more frequent request than perhaps it was in the past because...
argument carefully. With the <span class="searchmatch">usernames</span> thing, I'm referring particularly to Languageseeker's point that PUC is an unacceptable <span class="searchmatch">username</span> because it is an initialism...
comcast.net/com) and DSL (*.*bell.com, *.sbc.*, etc) tend to be semi-static, <span class="searchmatch">changing</span> only once or twice a year. Dial up ISPs obviously give a different IP address...
irrational notion that some anons have that makes them fear registering a <span class="searchmatch">username</span>.) —Stephen (Talk) 21:31, 4 December 2017 (UTC) Not wanting a user name...
this style of policy page, and to remove a few of the really old things (<span class="searchmatch">usernames</span> with limited punctuation are allowed, we don't really contact ISPs anymore)...
page has already been there, ever-<span class="searchmatch">changing</span>, since April 2009. You are <span class="searchmatch">changing</span> it now, and editors would continue <span class="searchmatch">changing</span> it ad infinitum. A system like...