This poll seems to be sneaking in a rather strong referencing policy that's not very clearly indicated at all by the proposal: all references would have to be what Wikipedia calls in-line references, while the use of non-inline sources would be evidently banned entirely?
This strikes me as much too strong to be practical in various common situations. For example, take a relatively simple reconstructed entry such as Proto-Uralic *kala. Each source listed is used for a wide variety of claims, such as 1) the form (segmental phonology) of the reconstruction; 2) the phonetics of the reconstruction; 3) the meaning of the reconstruction; 4) the cognateness of the various reflexes. Requiring purely in-line referencing would either lead to cramming the entry chock full of footnotes (literally every single claim made about reconstructed entries requires sourcing or other justification, strictly speaking), and something more complex, such as a PIE conjugation, would end up cluttered indeed.
You may also notice a separate External links section: this is being used to house a link to an exclusively online source, in this case {{R:Uralonet}}
(which is in fact simply the online edition of {{R:UEW}}
, and not a separate reference altogether). Having to move a source into this section, just because it happens to contain a link to a possibly link-rot-susceptible PDF (or, worse yet, Google Books!) version of a source that also exists in print would seem misleading to me.
If the intended purpose is simply to stop mixing auto-formatted with bullet-point lists of references, then Wikipedia's convention of separate "Footnotes" / "Notes" vs. "References" / "Literature" sections would probably work better. --Tropylium (talk) 16:45, 12 January 2017 (UTC)
As opposed to what, internal sources? But then, google:"External sources" finds a lot of hits, albeit many in a somewhat different meaning. Furthermore, "source" seems too suggestive of being source for the information on the page, which it really does not have to be; "External links" does not suffer from this. --Dan Polansky (talk) 18:25, 13 January 2017 (UTC)
{{R:ga:Dinneen}}
would fit that section? Or maybe it does? We may also want to choose another name: "Other sources", "Other works", etc. Maybe "Further reading", although it's not perfect, since we may want to link to a documentary video.Before voting on this, I'd like to see how this proposal would look like in some actual entries. I have never or rarely seen footnotes used in definitions, yet definitions are sometimes based on sources. It would be nice to be able to verify that the application of this policy proposal would result in better organized (and better-looking) entries. Tropylium's comment above indicates that in one type of entry the proposal would result in more visual clutter. — Eru·tuon 07:21, 15 January 2017 (UTC)