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User:Astronomyinertia

This user has autopatrolled rights on the English Wikipedia.
This user wrote "1998 Temple of the Tooth attack", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "1989 Temple of the Tooth attack", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Modern Technologies", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society", which became a DYK.
This user helped to make "List of Sri Lanka Twenty20 International cricketers" a featured list.
This user helped to make "List of international cricket centuries by Kumar Sangakkara" a featured list.
This user wrote "Ridi Viharaya", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Angampora", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "The Sri Lanka Gazette", which became a DYK.
This user wrote "Sunday Observer (Sri Lanka)", which became a DYK.
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Wait for Me, Daddy
Wait for Me, Daddy is a photograph taken by Claude P. Dettloff of the British Columbia newspaper The Province. It depicts a column of Canadian Army soldiers of the British Columbia Regiment (Duke of Connaught's Own) marching in New Westminster on October 1, 1940. In the foreground, five-year-old Warren "Whitey" Bernard runs out of his mother's reach towards his father, Private Jack Bernard. The photograph received extensive exposure worldwide, and was used in Canadian war-bond drives.Photograph credit: Claude P. Dettloff; restored by Yann Forget

Today's featured article

Weise's epitaph in Eisenberg, Germany
Weise's epitaph in Eisenberg, Germany

In historical linguistics, Weise's law describes the loss of palatal quality some consonants undergo in specific contexts in the Proto-Indo-European language. In short, when the consonants represented by * *ǵ *ǵʰ, called palatovelar consonants, are followed by *r, they lose their palatal quality, leading to a loss in distinction between them and the plain velar consonants *k *g *. Some exceptions exist, such as when the *r is followed by *i or when the palatal form is restored by analogy with related words. Although this sound change is most prominent in the satem languages, it is believed that the change must have occurred prior to the centum–satem division, based on an earlier sound change which affected the distribution of Proto-Indo-European *u and *r. The law is named after the German linguist Oskar Weise (epitaph pictured), who first postulated it in 1881 as the solution to reconciling cognates in Ancient Greek and Sanskrit. (Full article...)

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The Sri Lankan Barnstar of National Merit
For your thorough and highly researched, as well as neutral, additions to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam article and LTTE and civil war spin offs. You are a valued and limited member of WikiProject Sri Lanka and I hope you continue for a long time to come. :) Blackknight12 (talk) 09:34, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
this WikiAward was given to Astronomyinertia by Blackknight12 (talk) on 09:34, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
The Teamwork Barnstar
Thanks for collaborating and promoting the article List of international cricket centuries by Kumar Sangakkara to a FL. Absolutely brilliant work. Dipankan (Have a chat?) 05:59, 7 July 2012 (UTC)
The Original Barnstar
Thank you for the awesome article Ridi Viharaya! Zanhe (talk) 17:52, 3 August 2012 (UTC)