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Welcome to my page! I help edit Wikipedia and Wiktionary under the same name.
About me
editUsername
editMy username is from the Old English poem "Deor". The poem is about perseverance in the face of adversity and each stanza is separated by the refrain: "Þæs ofereode, þisses sƿa mæg", literally 'That passed over, so may this' but often translated wholly as 'This too shall pass'.
Pages I created (or significantly improved)
editCreated
edit- Petrica Kerempuh – a fictional Croatian folk hero
- Milan Ogrizović – an early 20th-century Croatian playwright, politician, and academic
- Kažimir Hraste – a Croatian sculptor, illustrator, and professor
- Stjepan Miletić – a 19th-century Croatian playwright and director
- Antun Bonifačić – a 20th-century Croatian fascist writer and government official
- Ivan Yazev – a 20th-century Soviet astronomer and professor
- Christian Bartholomae – a late 19th-century German linguist and Iranologist, best known as the namesake of Bartholomae's law
- The Banquet in Blitva – a political novel by Miroslav Krleža satirizing interwar Yugoslavia
- Weise's law – a late Proto-Indo-European sound law
- Jacques Loew – a 20th-century French priest and labor advocate
- Erik Sparre – a 16th-century Swedish noble, diplomat, and statesman executed during the Linköping Bloodbath
- Camping in Alaska – an American Midwest emo band from Huntsville, Alabama
- MT Petar Hektorović – a Danish-built Croatian ferry servicing the Split–Vis line
- Bernlef – an 8th-century Frisian bard
Created(-ish)
edit- I Thought You Didn't Even Like Leaving – debut album by Prince Daddy & the Hyena, now redirects to the band's page
Significantly improved
edit- → August Šenoa – a 19th-century Croatian author and playwright, generally considered to be the father of the Croatian novel
- → Willem Caland – a late 19th-century Dutch linguist and Indologist, best known as the namesake of the Caland system
- → Milan Begović – an early 20th-century Croatian playwright and editor
- → The Servile State – a 1912 economic and political treatise by Hilaire Belloc
- Glossary of sound laws in the Indo-European languages
- → Magic (play) – a 1913 comedy play by G. K. Chesterton