Difference between revisions of "Leading articles"

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(Created page with "{{Rule disclaimer}} A '''leading article''' is a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_(grammar) grammatical article] (e.g. "the", "a", or "an") which comes at the beginning...")
 
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{{Rule disclaimer}}
 
{{Rule disclaimer}}
A '''leading article''' is a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_(grammar) grammatical article] (e.g. "the", "a", or "an") which comes at the beginning of a work's title. Under both [[ACF]] and [[NAQT]] rules, the omission of a single leading article from an otherwise correct title does not render an answer incorrect; however, there are other differences between their rules.
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A '''leading article''' is a [[wikipedia:Article (grammar)|grammatical article]] (e.g. "the", "a", or "an") that comes at the beginning of a work's title. Under both [[ACF]] and [[NAQT]] rules, the omission of a single leading article from an otherwise correct title does not render an answer incorrect; however, there are other differences between their rules.
  
 
This is governed by ACF gameplay rule 7A and by NAQT correctness guideline C4b.
 
This is governed by ACF gameplay rule 7A and by NAQT correctness guideline C4b.
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===Incorrect articles===
 
===Incorrect articles===
In both ACF and NAQT rules, providing the wrong leading article for a work will render it incorrect.
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In both ACF and NAQT rules, providing the wrong leading article for a work will render an answer incorrect.
  
 
==Examples==
 
==Examples==
The most famous application of these rules are when writing about H.G. Well's "The Invisible Man" or Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man".
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The most famous application of these rules involves H. G. Wells's ''[[wikipedia:The Invisible Man|The Invisible Man]]'' and Ralph Ellison's ''[[wikipedia:Invisible Man|Invisible Man]]''.
  
 
{|class="wikitable"
 
{|class="wikitable"
! Answer wanted
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! width="129" | Answer wanted
! Answer given
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! width="129" | Answer given
 
! Correct in NAQT?
 
! Correct in NAQT?
 
! Correct in ACF?
 
! Correct in ACF?
 
|-
 
|-
|rowspan=3| "'''<u>Invisible Man</u>'''" (by Ralph Ellison)
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|rowspan=3| "'''<u>Invisible Man</u>'''"<br />(by Ralph Ellison)
 
|"Invisible Man"
 
|"Invisible Man"
 
|style="background: lightgreen"| '''Yes'''<br/>This is the exact title of the work.
 
|style="background: lightgreen"| '''Yes'''<br/>This is the exact title of the work.
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|style="background: pink"| '''No'''<br/>The addition of an extraneous leading article has rendered the answer incorrect.
 
|style="background: pink"| '''No'''<br/>The addition of an extraneous leading article has rendered the answer incorrect.
 
|-
 
|-
|rowspan=3| "The '''<u>Invisible Man</u>'''" (by H.G. Wells)
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|rowspan=3| "The '''<u>Invisible Man</u>'''"<br />(by H. G. Wells)
 
|"Invisible Man"
 
|"Invisible Man"
 
|style="background: lightgreen"| '''Yes'''<br/>Omitting the single leading article does not affect the correctness of this otherwise correct answer.
 
|style="background: lightgreen"| '''Yes'''<br/>Omitting the single leading article does not affect the correctness of this otherwise correct answer.
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|}
 
|}
  
Notice that the only difference in correctness in these situations is when an extraneous leading article which does not introduce ambiguity is added to a work which otherwise does not have one; in this situation, NAQT considers the answer correct while ACF considers the answer incorrect.
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Notice that the only difference in correctness in these situations is when an extraneous leading article which does not introduce ambiguity is added to a work that otherwise does not have one; in this situation, NAQT considers the answer correct while ACF considers the answer incorrect.

Revision as of 16:09, 1 May 2021

Disclaimer: This article is about rules. Its contents are not authoritative. Please consult official rules for up-to-date information.

NAQT gameplay ruleseligibility rulescorrectness guidelines
ACF gameplay ruleseligibility rules
PACE gameplay and eligibility rules

A leading article is a grammatical article (e.g. "the", "a", or "an") that comes at the beginning of a work's title. Under both ACF and NAQT rules, the omission of a single leading article from an otherwise correct title does not render an answer incorrect; however, there are other differences between their rules.

This is governed by ACF gameplay rule 7A and by NAQT correctness guideline C4b.

Edge cases

Extraneous articles

If a work does not have a leading article, then adding an article that is not present in the title of the work will render an answer incorrect under ACF rules. In NAQT rules, adding an extraneous leading article will not invalidate a response unless it introduces ambiguity with another work which uses that article.

Incorrect articles

In both ACF and NAQT rules, providing the wrong leading article for a work will render an answer incorrect.

Examples

The most famous application of these rules involves H. G. Wells's The Invisible Man and Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man.

Answer wanted Answer given Correct in NAQT? Correct in ACF?
"Invisible Man"
(by Ralph Ellison)
"Invisible Man" Yes
This is the exact title of the work.
Yes
This is the exact title of the work.
"The Invisible Man" No
The extraneous leading article "the" has created ambiguity between this work and another, rendering it incorrect.
No
The addition of an extraneous leading article has rendered the answer incorrect.
"An Invisible Man" Yes
The extraneous leading article "an" has not created ambiguity and is thus allowed.
No
The addition of an extraneous leading article has rendered the answer incorrect.
"The Invisible Man"
(by H. G. Wells)
"Invisible Man" Yes
Omitting the single leading article does not affect the correctness of this otherwise correct answer.
Yes
Omitting the single leading article does not affect the correctness of this otherwise correct answer.
"The Invisible Man" Yes
This is the exact title of the work.
Yes
This is the exact title of the work.
"An Invisible Man" No
The leading article "an" is not correct.
No
The leading article "an" is not correct.

Notice that the only difference in correctness in these situations is when an extraneous leading article which does not introduce ambiguity is added to a work that otherwise does not have one; in this situation, NAQT considers the answer correct while ACF considers the answer incorrect.