Supriya.chaskar
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If you have any doubt, please leave message on my talk page ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:AbhiSuryawanshi ) I will reply back on your talk Page. Happy Editing! :-) AbhiSuryawanshi (talk) 15:19, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
Hi Supriya. Unforunately, I had to revert this article to the version of 12 September 2011. There are more details at Talk:Pramathesh Barua. If you want to add to the article in future, I suggest you work on the material you want to add in draft space first at User:Supriya.chaskar/Pramathesh Barua. Then ask for an editor to check over the grammar, spelling and punctuation for you. Your Campus Ambassador may be able to suggest someone who could do this for you. Another thing you have to watch is copying in whole phrases from your source, as this can result in copyright infringement and will always be removed from Wikipedia. It's a mistake that new users to Wikipedia often make. Here are some tips to help you avoid that in the future:
- How to avoid close paraphrasing and copyright problems.
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- Wikipedia:Close paraphrasing is essential reading before you even start your next draft
- One of the best ways to avoid copyright violations (and to write a better article) is to use several sources rather than relying on a single reference work or web site.
- If you do find material that you want to use or refer to, copy it into a word processing file (or draft email) completely off-wiki and re-write it there before putting it an article or your sandbox
- But don't take the material and then start changing a few words in it or moving the phrases around. First of all, this will almost always result in paraphrasing which is so close that it risks being a copyright infringement. Secondly, if you just change a word to a similar word, you risk distorting the meaning completely and making the article confusing or even wrong.
- Read the material. Digest it. Internalize it. Make sure you understand the outline of the subject well enough to explain it out loud to another person without looking at your sources. Get one of your friends or classmates to listen to your mini-lecture.
- Then make an outline of the facts only—no adjectives, no phrases, just the facts
- Now attempt a draft of the topic, just using your outline, preferably after not having looked at the source material for a little while. This will force you to write it in your own words. It's just too easy to be tempted to copy the perfect phrases that are found in professionally written material
- Draft your article gradually rather than rushing to get it into Wikipedia. This approach will result in more interesting and coherent content. It also allows you the time to review your work carefully for potential copyright violations.
Best wishes, Voceditenore (talk) 16:40, 11 November 2011 (UTC)