This user understands the difference between its and it's. So should you.
’s
Thi's user know's that not every word that end's with s need's an apostrophe and will remove misused apostrophe's from Wikipedia with extreme prejudice.
"Wise men talk because they have something to say. Fools talk because they have to say something" -Plato
Welcome!
Hello, I am Kevin, a Sophomore in Bellbrook, Ohio. Note the userbox referencing my educational status, as it reflects much of my life. I am constantly taking something that might be considered a quasi-wikibreak, and I regret the inability to edit more frequently.
News and notes: Offline: Osama Khalid still in prison He has been imprisoned since 2020 for his Wikipedia edits. A fresh campaign is calling for his release.
Recent research: WikiLambda the Ultimate Does Abstract Wikipedia help fight "One ring to rule them all" solutions for knowledge access - or does it implement one itself?
3.78 RPM according to DeadbeefBot18:52, 5 June 2026 (UTC)
Today's featured article
15th-century illustration of the siege
The siege of Hennebont took place between late May and late June 1342 when the forces of Charles of Blois conducted an unsuccessful siege of the fortified port of Hennebont, commanded by Joanna of Montfort. The conflict was a part of the Breton Civil War, complicated by the pre-existing Hundred Years' War between France and England. Philip VI of France provided Charles, his nephew, with an army; this overran eastern Brittany and moved on Hennebont. On arrival part of the army attacked some of the town's defenders who were formed up outside its gate, but the French were pushed back in a disorderly retreat (pictured). The Montfortists pursued, inflicting many casualties and burning the French camp. Two days later, the French launched a series of better-planned assaults, but all were repulsed. The main French force moved on, leaving a detachment to attempt to starve the town into surrender. In late June, after a small English force had reinforced the town by sea, this too left. (Full article...)
... that a short story in The Bewitched Bourgeois was described by critics as both a "comedy of errors" and a parable about the inevitability of death?
... that Toby Fox described the development of his 2008 ROM hack as excavating ruins "made of crumbly graham crackers" with "hands made of atom bombs"?
... that the Kyoto Shimbun helped the Kobe Shimbun after their office was destroyed by an earthquake, one year after the two newspapers signed a mutual-aid agreement?
... that Genghis Khan's daughter Qojin got married between 23 and 27, older than usual for a Mongol woman?
A jewellery chain is a metal chain used in jewellery to encircle parts of the body or to support decorative charms and pendants. Jewellery chains are typically made from precious metals such as gold and silver, and have been worn since antiquity, with examples known from ancient Babylonia, Egypt, Greece and Rome. This gold chain, dating from the late 16th century and now in the collection of Livrustkammaren (the Swedish royal armoury), comprises 48 oval links alternating between garnet-set and rock-crystal-set designs, decorated with blue and white enamel. It may be a smaller version of King Charles IX's chain for the Order of Jehova, created in 1607, although another theory suggests that it was made by the goldsmith Ruprecht Miller and worn by King Gustavus Adolphus at his declaration of authority in 1611.
Artefact credit: possibly Ruprecht Miller; photographed by Erik Lernestål
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