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Stanislaw Lem falls under "Ananke in literature" but Philip K. Dick falls under "Ananke in popular culture"? That's weirdly arbitrary. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Shunn (
talk •
contribs)
15:55, 6 June 2015 (UTC)reply
Higgins
100.36.49.77 added "In C. A. Higgins's debut 2015 science fiction novel, Lightless, the cutting edge military space ship is named Ananke. The Ananke also features in the second book of the trilogy, 2016's Supernova.", which was removed. Sounds perfectly acceptable to me. Why was it removed, might I ask?
Deamonpen (
talk)
00:46, 11 September 2016 (UTC)reply
Requested move 8 April 2018
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The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a
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Repeated phrase?
In the introductory paragraph: "One of the Greek primordial deities or Greek primordial deities, the ..."
Danchall (
talk)
Why were the alternative spellings of "ananke" removed?
In the article history, I see that an
was made to remove "also spelled Anangke, Anance, or Anagke". The comment for the edit says "n before γ, κ, ξ, χ as per WP:GREEK". The user making the edit was
/info/en/?search=User:Omnipaedista .
In fact, I was reading such an article and I wanted to confirm that "anagke" and "ananke" were indeed the same concept. Wikipedia used to provide this useful information, but now it doesn't. Why?
If there is no good reason for the removal, could someone please reinsert the deleted text? I'm happy to do it if others agree to the change.
PS I didn't know if it is proper etiquette to contact the person who made the edit directly, so I thought I would ask here first.