Jump to content

Romanian Wikipedia: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
KamikazeBot (talk | contribs)
m robot Adding: hu:Román Wikipédia
Line 23: Line 23:
In April 2004, the Romanian Wikipedia supported the launch of the [[:roa-rup:|Aromanian Wikipedia]] (see [[Aromanian language]]).
In April 2004, the Romanian Wikipedia supported the launch of the [[:roa-rup:|Aromanian Wikipedia]] (see [[Aromanian language]]).


During its existence, the Romanian Wikipedia encountered problems concerning its division and the creation of a separate [[:mo:|Moldovan Wikipedia]] (see [[Moldovan language]]). A Moldovan language version of Wikipedia exists as it was created automatically together with a larger number of other Wikipedias, because the language had been assigned a separate [[ISO 639]] code (''mo/mol''&mdash;which were deprecated in November 2008 by the ISO authorities<ref>http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/code_changes.php</ref>). At its beginnings it worked as a portal redirecting to the Romanian Wikipedia, but it eventually began allowing content (although only intended for Cyrillic Moldovan/Romanian as it was used before 1989 in the [[Moldovan SSR]]), starting big editing wars and endless discussion. Starting from 2006 it is frozen and editing is no longer permitted. This question is still raised from time to time, although users on Wikipedia voted on its closure.<ref>[http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Proposals_for_closing_projects/Closure_of_Moldovan_Wikipedia Vote and discussion on the closure of Moldovan Wikipedia] on Meta-Wiki</ref>
During its existence, the Romanian Wikipedia encountered problems concerning its division and the creation of a separate [[:mo:|Moldovan Wikipedia]] (see [[Moldovan language]]). A Moldovan language version of Wikipedia exists as it was created automatically together with a larger number of other Wikipedias, because the language had been assigned a separate [[ISO 639]] code (''mo/mol''&mdash;which were deprecated in November 2008 by the ISO authorities<ref>http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/code_changes.php</ref>). At its beginnings it worked as a portal redirecting to the Romanian Wikipedia, but it eventually began allowing content (although only intended for Cyrillic Moldovan/Romanian as it was used before 1989 in the [[Moldovan SSR|Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
]]), starting big editing wars and endless discussion. Starting from 2006 it is frozen and editing is no longer permitted. This question is still raised from time to time, although users on Wikipedia voted on its closure.<ref>[http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Proposals_for_closing_projects/Closure_of_Moldovan_Wikipedia Vote and discussion on the closure of Moldovan Wikipedia] on Meta-Wiki</ref>


The Romanian Wikipedia reached the 100,000 article milestone on 11 January 2008. There are more than 45,000 registered users, of which 20 are administrators.
The Romanian Wikipedia reached the 100,000 article milestone on 11 January 2008. There are more than 45,000 registered users, of which 20 are administrators.

Revision as of 23:53, 25 December 2010

Favicon of Wikipedia Romanian Wikipedia
The Main Page of the Romanian Wikipedia on November 25th, 2007
Type of site
Internet encyclopedia project
Available inRomanian
HeadquartersMiami, Florida
OwnerWikimedia Foundation
URLhttp://ro.wikipedia.org/
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional

Romanian Wikipedia (abr. ro.wiki or ro.wp[1]; in Romanian: Wikipedia în limba română) is the Romanian language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Started in July 2003, this edition has about 150,000 articles (as of 4 October 2010) and is the 19th largest Wikipedia edition. In December 2004, users on the Romanian Wikipedia started to talk about founding a local chapter of Wikimedia, Asociaţia Wikimedia România.

History

The first articles in the Romanian Wikipedia were written in July 2003, with the first version of the main page being drafted on July 12. The user interface, initially in English, started being translated into Romanian by Bogdan Stăncescu (registered with the username Gutza) as soon as he was given sysop rights.[2] The same user subsequently contacted several Romanian universities that were available on the internet, as well as the Romanian Academy, in order to attract new contributors. His efforts were soon remarked by the Romanian media, who invited him on several occasions to introduce the project to the public.[3][4] By the end of 2003, the Romanian Wikipedia had exceeded 3000 articles, ranking 16th among all Wikipedias. The 10,000th article was written on December 13, 2004, and the 50,000th on January 5, 2007.

In April 2004, the Romanian Wikipedia supported the launch of the Aromanian Wikipedia (see Aromanian language).

During its existence, the Romanian Wikipedia encountered problems concerning its division and the creation of a separate Moldovan Wikipedia (see Moldovan language). A Moldovan language version of Wikipedia exists as it was created automatically together with a larger number of other Wikipedias, because the language had been assigned a separate ISO 639 code (mo/mol—which were deprecated in November 2008 by the ISO authorities[5]). At its beginnings it worked as a portal redirecting to the Romanian Wikipedia, but it eventually began allowing content (although only intended for Cyrillic Moldovan/Romanian as it was used before 1989 in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic ), starting big editing wars and endless discussion. Starting from 2006 it is frozen and editing is no longer permitted. This question is still raised from time to time, although users on Wikipedia voted on its closure.[6]

The Romanian Wikipedia reached the 100,000 article milestone on 11 January 2008. There are more than 45,000 registered users, of which 20 are administrators.

Peculiarities

The logo of the Romanian Wikipedia was slightly different from the logos of other Wikipedias. The letter Й in the logo was replaced with the Romanian letter Ă (A-breve), further adapting this Wikipedia to the local market,[7]

Romanian articles can contain small variations of writing, mostly regarding the use of the letters "â" and "î" to mark the close central unrounded vowel /ɨ/ (cf. Romanian alphabet). According to the 1993 rules accepted by the Romanian Academy, /ɨ/ is transcribed as either î when used as the first or last letter of words, or â when it occurs in the middle of the word (with some exceptions). Still, between 1953 and 1993, the Romanian language only used î - after 1964, an exception was made for derivations of the words "Romania" (România) and "romanian" (român). The Academy rules are mandatory in government organisations and in state schools in Romania. Moldova adopted the Latin alphabet for the Romanian language before the spelling reform in 1993, and it didn't switch to the new spelling up until 2001, using the letter î before exclusively (exceptions were made for România and the other related words; these are spelled with â). In practice, either usage is acceptable in both countries, and indeed there are publishing houses and printed magazines who use either of the two rules. Vojvodina uses the new Romanian spelling. Other spelling differences include sunt/sînt or niciun/nici un. The policy on language versions is established into the official policy of the Romanian Wikipedia.[8]

As for the addressing policy, Romanian Wikipedia uses (at least in theory) the polite form of the second person pronouns, verbs, or pronominal adjectives. A policy on this was discussed in early 2006, and consensus was reached for the use of dvs. (polite "you") instead of tu (personal "you") on its pages.[9]

References