| ::The use of the parentheses in ''behavio(u)r'' seems distinct because it uses the parentheses to indicate an optional letter, little different form the generic case{s) of the use of parentheses. There is no shift in meaning from the the meanings of the constituent lexical items. [[User: DCDuring |DCDuring]] <small >[[User talk: DCDuring|TALK]]</small > 03:02, 29 December 2012 (UTC) | | ::The use of the parentheses in ''behavio(u)r'' seems distinct because it uses the parentheses to indicate an optional letter, little different form the generic case{s) of the use of parentheses. There is no shift in meaning from the the meanings of the constituent lexical items. [[User: DCDuring |DCDuring]] <small >[[User talk: DCDuring|TALK]]</small > 03:02, 29 December 2012 (UTC) |
| + | : '''Delete'''. There are several ways to give alternate spellings of the same word, and using parentheses is one of them. As -sche has already said, we don't need ''[[behavior/behaviour]]'' either. — [[User:TAKASUGI Shinji|T<small>AKASUGI</small> Shinji]] ([[User talk:TAKASUGI Shinji|talk]]) 08:31, 29 December 2012 (UTC) |
| == [[get your coat love, you've pulled|get your coat love, you've pulled]] == | | == [[get your coat love, you've pulled|get your coat love, you've pulled]] == |
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