Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord! |
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here. |
User talk:Leon Okazaki: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Your edits == | == Your edits == | ||
Stop making them. Changing "pistol" to "handgun" is entirely needless, especially when you do it in links to a page called "M1911 pistol series" and break them, and ''especially'' for weapons which '''are''' pistols in even the most exacting sense of the term (a sense which is barely used in US English and not at all internationally; for example, the full classification of the Webley Mk. IV is "Pistol, Revolver, Webley No. 1 Mk VI") like the M1911. [[User:Evil Tim|Evil Tim]] 06:40, 13 June 2011 (CDT) | Stop making them. Changing "pistol" to "handgun" is entirely needless, especially when you do it in links to a page called "M1911 pistol series" and break them, and ''especially'' for weapons which '''are''' pistols in even the most exacting sense of the term (a sense which is barely used in US English and not at all internationally; for example, the full classification of the Webley Mk. IV is "Pistol, Revolver, Webley No. 1 Mk VI") like the M1911. Even Samuel Colt's original patent was for a "revolving-breech pistol," so it's not like it's even an "official" term in the US, just one used by some handgun experts for making distinctions. [[User:Evil Tim|Evil Tim]] 06:40, 13 June 2011 (CDT) |
Revision as of 11:47, 13 June 2011
Your edits
Stop making them. Changing "pistol" to "handgun" is entirely needless, especially when you do it in links to a page called "M1911 pistol series" and break them, and especially for weapons which are pistols in even the most exacting sense of the term (a sense which is barely used in US English and not at all internationally; for example, the full classification of the Webley Mk. IV is "Pistol, Revolver, Webley No. 1 Mk VI") like the M1911. Even Samuel Colt's original patent was for a "revolving-breech pistol," so it's not like it's even an "official" term in the US, just one used by some handgun experts for making distinctions. Evil Tim 06:40, 13 June 2011 (CDT)