This page is not Wikipedia:Reliable sources or Wikipedia:Citing sources.


January[edit]

"We bring you the Wikipedia definition of this Cajun speciality: 'A turducken is a …"
"Vital statistics: Different types of frequency distributions." (graph)
According to Wikipedia, it’s "an automatic identification method, relying on [...] devices called RFID tags or transponders ..."
Sir William Blunt-Instrument never existed. That entry is from the 'Bad Jokes and other Deleted Nonsense' section of Wikipedia (http://wikipedia.org).
Cites Wikipedia as the source of information on Spelt.
Cites Wikipedia as the source of information on Ambergris.
Uses Wikipedia image on sperm whale.
Links to quiz bowl.
Levingston was a victim of phishing. According to Wikipedia, the term phishing “arises from the use of increasingly sophisticated lures to ‘fish’ for users’ financial information and passwords.”

February[edit]

March[edit]

"In January, we scanned about 3,500 films, and we cut about 2.2 million images to about 2.5 terabytes of data," he said. Another 3 terabytes of backup copies was also generated. This is with just four scanners. (A terabyte is a trillion bytes; the text of the Library of Congress would comprise 20 terabytes, according to Wikipedia.)"

April[edit]

April, 2006, p. 59. "What is a Wiki?" Quotes Wikipedia's definition of a wiki.
"Some jerk contemptuously replied, in print, that Wiki would not publish my note, demanding to know: Where's the evidence? He never contacted me directly, as he should have; he just high-handedly dismissed my note, going on and on like a nutcase about: Where's the evidence?"
"I have received a ton of e-mails about my denunciation of Wikipedia.... I criticized Wikipedia for not providing enough information on mutual funds, but [a Wikipedian] pointed out that the Encyclopedia Britannica is a far worse offender in this regard. Having done more reading, I concede that I went too far. There are good articles in Wikipedia."
"Berkeley is far from the first American city to have an "official city bird." Bakersfield has the American robin. San Francisco chose the California quail, and Santa Monica adopted the brown pelican as its official bird, according to a list of official city birds on the Wikipedia Web site."

I quote from the online encyclopaedia Wikipedia: "Scientology’s doctrines famously include the story of Xenu, the ruler of the Galactic Confederacy who brought billions of frozen people to Earth 75 million years ago, stacked them around volcanoes and blew them up with hydrogen bombs, creating swarms of disembodied alien souls known as Body Thetans."

According to the online encyclopaedia, Wikipedia, "Funeralgate" is the name given to a scandal involving George W. Bush and family campaign contributor Robert Waltrip, owner of Service Corporation International, the largest funeral home company in the world.
"In 1999, Bush was subpoenaed but refused to testify in a lawsuit filed against the state of Texas and SCI by Eliza May, former director of the Texas Funeral Service Commission, who claimed that she was fired when she refused to quit investigating SCI despite pressure from Bush and his then Chief of Staff Joe Allbaugh," Wikipedia reports.
"The lawsuit was quietly settled in November, 2001, weeks before the revelation in the media that two Florida cemeteries owned by SCI were recycling graves, removing remains from their places of rest and placing other people in the graves."

May[edit]

"According to the infamous Wikipedia, the term 'quarterlife crisis' was coined in 1965 by Canadian psychologist Elliot Jaques. However, Alexandra Robbins and Abby Wilner, authors of Quarterlife Crisis: The Unique Challenges of Life in Your 20s, beg to differ."
"The excellent Wikipedia entry on the subject cites the Isaac Asimov story "No Refuge Could Save," in which a Nazi spy is unmasked because he can recite the song's full lyrics—including the story's title phrase: No refuge could save the hireling and slave/ From the terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave. No real American would know those lines."

"There's a website called Wikipedia. OK (laughing). On that website and on your autobiography it says you starred in a movie." (Heritier O'Brien article cited)

"Birmingham's Victoria Square became a pedestrian space in 1993...See Victoria Square, Birmingham."
"Enligt nätencyklopedin Wikipedia finns två kända överlevande från Titanic kvar i livet. De är 94 och 95 år gamla och bor i England." (translated as "According to the internet encyclopedia, Wikipedia, there are two known survivors from Titanic still alive. They are 94 and 95 years old and live in England."
"Shared bathrooms, bacheloresque cooking mishaps — it's a fitting lifestyle for a group whose official perks include, according to Wikipedia, "low-cost haircuts" and a gym membership. Also, their signature is worth as much as a stamp. (Which, come to the think of it, was the hallmark of another penny-ante House scandal of the '90s.)
No quote. Host cited material from Jennicam article.
Homer the Heretic linked on the right-hand side
"In 1982, Jack Valenti, then head of the MPAA, testified on the evils of the VCR, which he claimed would ruin the movie industry. "While the Japanese are unable to duplicate the American films by a flank assault, they can destroy it by this video cassette recorder," he said."
"According to the Wikipedia: A monsoon is a (wind) pattern that reverses direction on a seasonal basis. The term was originally applied to monsoonal winds in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean. The word is also used to label the season in which this wind blows from the southwest in India and adjacent areas that is characterised by very heavy rainfall, and specifically the rainfall that is associated with this wind." and so on...
"Wikipedia says AdWords is Google's flagship advertising product where 'advertisers specify the words that should trigger their ads and the maximum amount they are willing to pay per click'."

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

Uses the IBM 5150 image in their piece on the original IBM PC.
"Justice V R Krishna Iyer is now 91 years old. Even though he cannot walk without assistance, his brilliant mind, which made him one of the greatest judges to sit on the Supreme Court, continues to search for answers to India's many problems."
  • Википедија одређује нарцизам према дефиницији (Benczúz Gyula) из 1881. године, као опис самољубља наводећи да израз потиче из грчке митологије [...]
  • Wikipedia defines narcism according to the definition (Benczúz Gyula) from the year 1881, as the description of self-love stating that the expression originates from Greek mythology [...]

September[edit]

"Source: Wikipedia, Courier-Mail"
"Irwin was married to Terri Raines Irwin, a Eugene native whose family was in the trucking business, according to a Wikipedia entry about Irwin."
Cites information about Maynard James Keenan.
"Because of their sexual nature, they survived the test of time and remain widely known even today," comments (yesterday's) entry on Catherine in online dictionary Wikipedia.
"The original Scirocco replaced the Karmann Ghia coupe and was sold from 1974 to 1992, sharing basics with the Golf and Rabbit, according to a history of the model in the online encyclopedia Wikipedia."
The Foreign Office of the Government of Pakistan threatens to "take immediate notice" and "ban several websites" when a reporter from the Pakistan Daily Times sought comment on the Wikipedia article The Islamic Emirate of Waziristan.
"According to a new rating of the world's most mass-produced cars, Russia's answer to the VW Beetle is the 10th most prolific car in history.
Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia responsible for the list and a panel of motoring experts, revealed that AvtoVAZ, the company that makes Ladas, has produced 13.5 million of the vehicles since the early 1970s, turning Lada into an unlikely global auto icon."
"A simple example of such an algorithm is called a linear congruential generator; an explanation of how it works, and why it's flawed, is at Wikipedia."
"'The NCAA termed Chief Illiniwek as a 'hostile and abusive' symbol, and banned the university from hosting postseason activities as long as it continues to use the symbol,' according to www.en.wikipedia.org."
According to Wikipedia.com, a fair-catch kick has been attempted four times in the last 42 years. Two noteworthy excerpts from Wikipedia on opportunites when free kicks were passed up...

October[edit]

Sourced and credited the article on Lawrence Taylor.

November[edit]

December[edit]

"Una lista aparecida en la Wikipedia enumera a 25 países o Estados libres que se encuentran sin fuerzas armadas, toda una rareza en un mundo con las características armamentistas de la época."
Wikipedia.com defines green building as "the practice of increasing the efficiency with which buildings and their sites use and harvest energy , water , and materials , and reducing building impacts on human health and the environment , through better siting, design , construction , operation, maintenance, and removal - the complete building life cycle."

An article about the Pareto Principle in the American Chronicle starts out with citing Wikipedia. http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=18340

The Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten quotes Wikipedia for information about the Lahore Treaty in an article about Indian demands for the return of the Koh-i-Noor. The article on Koh-i-Noor reads: One of the terms of the Treaty of Lahore, the legal agreement formalising this occupation, was as follows: The gem called the Koh-i-Noor which was taken from Shah Shuja-ul-Mulk by Maharajah Ranjit Singh shall be surrendered by the Maharajah of Lahore to the Queen of England. ...

The Danish text reads: Og af Lahore-traktaten fremgår det, skriver Wikipedia, at "Koh-i-nor-diamanten skal overgå fra maharajahen af Lahore til Englands dronning." = The Treaty of Lahore specifies, according to Wikipedia, that the "Koh-i-Noor diamond shall be transferred from the Maharajah of Lahore to the Queen of England". http://www.jp.dk/udland/artikel:aid=4159202/ --Valentinian (talk) / (contribs) 17:54, 30 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]