If an article needs references but you are unable to find them yourself, you can tag the article with the templates Template:Tl or Template:Tl. It is often more useful to indicate specific statements that need references, by tagging those statements with Template:Tl, which can be placed in the same place you would place an inline reference.
Feel free to ask me anything the links and talk pages don't answer. You can sign your name by typing 4 tildes, likes this: ~~~~.
I saw that you appreciate policy links, so I thought I'd give you my standard intro. Cheers, Sam [Spade] 20:03, 17 Jun 2004 (UTC)
no trouble
I had that on hand, I provide it to new users. I saw you'd already been greeted, but you showed such enthusiasm for policy I felt giving you my welcome couldn't possibly hurt. I agree that the policy rox. Some of the users are expletives, and some of the descisions made by democracy (rather than by concensus) suck, but the policies are generally quite good. Glad to have ya, Sam [Spade] 20:41, 17 Jun 2004 (UTC)
Correcting Grammatical Errors
Latest comment: 30 August 20071 comment1 person in discussion
If you are interested in correcting grammatical errors, please help in fixing all of the usages of fly common names (for that matter, usages of all insect common names). The common name for Tabanus sp. is "horse fly" not horsefly or horse-fly. This standard applies to 100% of true fly (Diptera) names and the converse applies to 100% of non-Diptera (ex. dragonfly, sawfly, scorpionfly, whitefly, firefly, etc.)
In addition, common names should be redirected to their appropriate scientific taxanomic level (ex. long-legged fly → Dolichopodidae {curently no page}; house fly → Musca domestica {currently Musca domestica is directed to the incorrect version of house fly, "housefly"}; fly → Diptera {right now they are two separate pages}.