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Sincerely, Walter Görlitz (talk) 17:39, 28 December 2019 (UTC)   (Leave me a message)Reply

Walter Görlitz (talk) 17:39, 28 December 2019 (UTC)Reply

National varieties of English

edit

  Hello. In a recent edit, you changed one or more words or styles from one national variety of English to another. Because Wikipedia has readers from all over the world, our policy is to respect national varieties of English in Wikipedia articles.

For a subject exclusively related to the United Kingdom (for example, a famous British person), use British English. For something related to the United States in the same way, use American English. For something related to another English-speaking country, such as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, India, or Pakistan use the variety of English used there. For an international topic, use the form of English that the original author of the article used.

In view of that, please don't change articles from one version of English to another, even if you don't normally use the version in which the article is written. Respect other people's versions of English. They, in turn, should respect yours. Other general guidelines on how Wikipedia articles are written can be found in the Manual of Style. If you have any questions about this, you can ask me on my talk page or visit the help desk. Thank you. Walter Görlitz (talk) 20:34, 4 January 2020 (UTC)Reply

Hey super sorry about that. From my point of view, what I tried to do was simply to go through the part of the text that I myself wrote, which I noticed had some spelling errors (I wrote all four sentences that were corrected). I guess you commented about the spelling of "practised". When I quickly looked it up after my browser flagged it, I thought it was the less used spelling of the two, i.e. US English can also use "practised", but I might have been wrong. The other three words I think in fact were misspelled if I'm not mistaken.Programmerarn (talk) 21:05, 4 January 2020 (UTC)Reply