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Talk:Weela Weela Walya

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GA Review

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Reviewing
This review is transcluded from Talk:The River Saile/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Jezhotwells (talk) 15:10, 8 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

I shall be reviewing this article against the Good Article criteria, following its nomination for Good Article status.

Disambiguations: none found. Jezhotwells (talk) 15:11, 8 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Linkrot: none found. Jezhotwells (talk) 15:11, 8 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Checking against GA criteria

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GA review (see here for criteria)
  1. It is reasonably well written.
    a (prose): b (MoS for lead, layout, word choice, fiction, and lists):
    The lead does not summarize the article, it contains material not found in the artcile, and omits material that is in the article. Please read WP:LEAD.
    The ballad has been referenced in various books such "various" here is a weasel word.
  2. It is factually accurate and verifiable.
    a (references): b (citations to reliable sources): c (OR):
    What makes the barely literate website http://www.zeban.it/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=146:weile-weile-waile&catid=35:song&Itemid=63&lang=en a reliable source?
    The refernce to Sebastian Barry. Annie Dunne Penguin. May 2003 needs a page number.
  3. It is broad in its coverage.
    a (major aspects): b (focused):
    This is wehre the artcile falls down. Four sentences, less than a hundred words acbnnot by any means be thought of as broad coverage of the subject
  4. It follows the neutral point of view policy.
    Fair representation without bias:
  5. It is stable.
    No edit wars, etc.:
  6. It is illustrated by images, where possible and appropriate.
    a (images are tagged and non-free images have fair use rationales): b (appropriate use with suitable captions):
    None used.
  7. Overall:
    Pass/Fail:
    This article needs considerable expansion to meet the GA criterion of broad coverage, so I will nto be listing it now. Jezhotwells (talk) 15:22, 8 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Re-write and move

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This version of the article is full of inaccuracies and dubious facts. The most significant error is that it says that the song was catalogued in Child's Ballads (it even cites the pages it's supposed to be on), when in fact that book makes no mention of it. What's worse, this is repeated on many web pages that are returned by a Google search. This, and some of the other facts, originally came from some blog page that is now long dead, but most of the facts ("The song is a reference to famine time practices") are completely unsourced. I am re-writing the article from scratch. I'm also moving it from "The River Saile" to "Weela Weela Walya", the name it has in the Roud catalogue. I have never heard it named as "The River Saile", and it doesn't appear under that name on any album. Scolaire (talk) 07:59, 20 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Recent move

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Nolan361 moved this article to Weile Weile Waile with the edit summary "Title was misspelled". He/she gave no indication of why they thought the spelling was wrong or why their version was right. There are, of course, multiple spellings of the title. As I explained in the section above this one, "Weela Weela Walya" is the name it has in the Roud catalogue. Therefore it is the closest we have to an authoritative spelling. The article should not be moved unless the mover first obtains a consensus here on the talk page. Scolaire (talk) 13:30, 6 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

if that is how Roud has it, then... I guess we should leave it so, though it’s not how I’ve seen it spelt. User:Kafka Liz a girl is no one 00:14, 22 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Comedic

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Added a cn, despite my dislike of such tags, because I don’t see how the word fits. Nothing funny happens in the song, and the whole thing seems more matter-of-fact than making light. I’m wondering if we can get some more sources, round this out, and not have the majority of the article be just song lyrics. User:Kafka Liz a girl is no one 00:18, 22 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

My original edit said "comic". Somewhere along the way that was changed to "comedic", which presumably somebody thought was more grammatical, but which is further away from what I intended. What I really wanted to convey was that it was told in a "fun" way. It's a gruesome story, but not meant to inspire fear or shock or sadness. It's sung for a laugh. When I was young, I heard several versions with comical verses added, e.g. "She put the babby in the bin" followed by "The binmen all went out on strike", or "They took her off and she go' hung / The rope went up and she went bedung!" Unfortunately, "fun" is not an encyclopedic word. "Light-hearted" might be better, or maybe you could suggest an alternative phrasing. Unfortunately, also, I haven't succeeded in finding any more or better sources in the three and a half years since I did that edit. Like you, I dislike "cn" and other such tags, so could I ask you to please remove it, regardless of the outcome of this discussion? If sources can't be found, the tag won't make them magically appear. Scolaire (talk) 15:59, 23 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for answering. I’ll remove the tag - and think about how to phrase this. Edit to add: see this is already done.User:Kafka Liz a girl is no one 15:06, 28 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]