Jump to content

User:Nirajrm

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

6,582 Featured Articles as of today.

My talkMy contributionsSandboxMy emailIndiaMy autograph bookIndia-related topics notice boardSpoken articles Quiz PortalsIndiaUNChessDogsContentsKeyboard shortcutsMCBWP:SHORTMy userboxesCHU3ORfCFACRfADYKRCNew pages (skip) • HelpVillage PumpWelcoming CommitteeRecent Changes PatrolVandalProofBe boldDon't bite the newcomersFive pillarsBeware of the tigersAmnesia testSignatures


Welcome to Nirajrm's (Niraj) userpage

Today is Wednesday, September 25, 2024, 21:22 (UTC/GMT).


La Promenade
La Promenade is an early Impressionist painting by the French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir, created in 1870. The oil-on-canvas work depicts a young couple on an excursion outside a city, walking on a woodland path. Influenced by the Rococo Revival style during the Second French Empire, the work reflects the older style and themes of eighteenth-century artists like Jean-Honoré Fragonard and Antoine Watteau. It also shows the influence of Claude Monet on Renoir's new approach to painting. La Promenade now hangs in the Getty Center in Los Angeles, California.Painting credit: Pierre-Auguste Renoir
How to link to word definitions

Wikipedia has a sister project that presents hundreds of thousands of word definitions. It's called Wiktionary. Let's say you are writing a sentence and you want to create a link to the definition of a word, the understanding of which is crucial to understanding that article. But in this hypothetical situation, you don't want to link to the Wikipedia page for that word because doing so would be overkill. So, using our Source Editor, here's how you would provide a link to the definition of "understanding" on Wiktionary:

both [[wiktionary:understanding|]] and [[wikt:understanding|]] will display like this:

understanding

and will link to the definition of the word "understanding".

Notice that the "pipe trick" (|) was used in the links above.

To add this auto-updating template to your user page, use {{totd}}
"The game of chess is not merely an idle amusement; several very valuable qualities of the mind are to be acquired and strengthened by it, so as to become habits ready on all occasions; for life is a kind of chess." — American philosopher, scientist, and author Benjamin Franklin