As Wikipedia grows and grows, it's becoming ever more difficult to find a new topic to create. Local areas of interest are one topic that's still growing. When you have decided on a topic to create, see the link to the right.
Probably because all English speakers read and contribute to the English Wikipedia.
Wikipedia is a popular website used by countless people everyday. It is made by volunteers so many people can contribute by adding a picture to an article, removing and vandalism, adding to articles, or writing a new article.
The articles on Wikipedia are written by users of the site.
Most of the Wikipedia articles can be edited by anyone
How I wrote a million Wikipedia articles, is a book by Maher Asaad Baker, that the author tells how he collected and managed the data, the way he prepared the articles, and the way he automated the process to finally achieved adding 1 million Wikipedia articles to Egyptian Wikipedia.
There are at least 19,700,000 articles in all languages in Wikipedia. 3,700,000 are in English.
As of July, 2012, there are more than 4 million articles in the English Wikipedia.
There are 3,202,091 on Wikipedia as of 2-22-10.
Anyone who has an account on Wikipedia and cares about Wikipedia.
Search Wikipedia - there are loads of articles !
as of January 2012, there are 128,976 Hebrew articles.
Anyone who signs up for an account on Wikipedia.
Wikipedia has no connection with Microsoft except some articles about them.
There are a total of 285 languages that offer official Wikipedia articles that come under the auspices of the Wikimedia Foundation. The vast majority of these articles are in English however at over 4 million articles.
The articles contribute to the relevancy of a given topic through its analysis. Most articles would analyze a given topic and provide sufficient information on the same.
Wikipedia is written by millions of volunteers around the world.
There are tons of articles about Bipolar on the internet. Check EHow, HubPages, Wikipedia, and MentalHealthAmerica.org.
try wikipedia
As of November 2014, Wikipedia had over 4,652,535 articles in English, over 1,774,000 in German, over 1,560,000 in French, over 1,155,000 in Italian, over 1,137,000 in Spanish, and a combined total of over 34,290,907 articles.If you go to Wikipedia's home page you will see a list of different languages by number of articles.For a more exact number go to the Wikipedia page called Wikipedia:Size of Wikipedia.
Unfortunately, the Wikipedia articles that are on Answers.com (on the ReferenceAnswers side, not the WikiAnswers side) are exact copies of the Wikipedia articles, and they update almost as fast. It wouldn't do any good to edit it only on the ReferenceAnswers side, because any edit would only be copied over when we got the next update from Wikipedia.
No. Anybody can register for free - or even contribute anonymously. However, I would suggest you register, so you can easily follow-up on all your favorite articles, etc.No. Anybody can register for free - or even contribute anonymously. However, I would suggest you register, so you can easily follow-up on all your favorite articles, etc.No. Anybody can register for free - or even contribute anonymously. However, I would suggest you register, so you can easily follow-up on all your favorite articles, etc.No. Anybody can register for free - or even contribute anonymously. However, I would suggest you register, so you can easily follow-up on all your favorite articles, etc.
The job of Wikipedia is not to copy the content of a book verbatim, but instead provide a general overview of the book.
To modify the articles of confederation(see "Philadelphia Convention" Wikipedia) To modify the articles of confederation(see "Philadelphia Convention" Wikipedia)
The articles are decently accurate but there is a high chance of something being false.
If you mean who publishes the articles in wikipedia these are composed of internet volunteers. Actually anyone who has internet connection can make changes to the articles, except for some with limited cases. For more info about wikipedia, read the related links