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{{Thank you very much}} – Thank you very much! {{Thank You IP}} – A special thank you for your help in our battle against vandalism. Thank you so much for your efforts to improve this encyclopedia, and welcome to Wikipedia! Please consider creating an account for yourself! {} – Thank you {} – Thanks {{Because you thanked me}}
To thank other users or see the thanks you have received, you must be a registered user and be logged in. You can only thank other registered users and automated bots; [6] edits by IP users cannot be thanked. See § Alternatives below. You can only thank someone for a given edit once.
In the Real World, simple words such as "please" and "thank you" go a long way towards facilitating calm, reasoned and respectful discussion. The same is true online. The same is true online. In fact, it is even more important online, because you don't have all the body language and nonverbal communication that is used face-to-face.
96. Thank you for always being a person I can count on. You’re a rockstar. 97. Thank you for always being the first to show up each day and the last to leave. I appreciate you more than you know ...
A discussion is taking place to decide whether this proposal complies with the categorization guidelines. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the categories for discussion page. Thank you. Peaceray 21:37, 16 May 2021 (UTC)
{{Interwiki talkback}} – a "you have new messages" notice to put on other users' talk pages for interwiki purposes {{Whisperback}} – a less obtrusive template than {{Talkback}}, with more features and without the box {{You've got mail}} – like {{Talkback}} but to notify of an offsite e-mail
Use the same indentation and list formatting as what you are replying to, plus one level at the end of the indent/list code. E.g., if you are replying to something in a complicated discussion that starts with #:::*, just copy-paste that and add a :, resulting in #:::*: in front of your reply (or use #:::** if you feel it is necessary for your ...
TBUA, if you end up closing a similar discussion in the future, I prefer describing the votes towards the end of the summary, like you did in the second RFC. That might help less experienced people understand that the arguments are primary, and the votes are confirmatory evidence rather than primary.