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Proposed deletion of Laes ka noola Language

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The article Laes ka noola Language has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:

Non-notable per WP:GNG, unreferenced, original research per WP:NOR or possible WP:HOAX

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With one lip and no teeth?

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I have come across a very odd consonant pronounced with a trill of the bottom lip only, without hitting anything else except of course the air that is causing it to trill. How would one classify a consonant like this? Zuloo37 (talk) 04:39, 28 January 2010 (UTC)Reply

Image without license

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August 2014

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  • Glycaminol can react with [[formic acid]] to form the amino acid [Glycine]], releasing water.

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New chemistry articles

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I have noticed that you have created many articles about chemical compounds recently. Thanks for your interest in contributing to Wikipedia's chemistry content. However, there is some concern that these new articles may not meet Wikipedia's guidelines for notability - guidelines that all subjects must meet to avoid being deleted. There is a discussion at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Chemicals that you may wish to contribute to. Until that discussion is concluded, could you please refrain from creating any more of these articles? Thank you. -- Ed (Edgar181) 00:35, 18 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

Where did this info come from?

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In the methoxyamine article, you gave this information with no references):

Hydroxylamine + Methane <--> Hydrogen + Methoxyamine / N-methylhydroxylamine
HONH2 + CH4 <--> H2 + H3CONH2 / HONHCH3
Methanol + Ammonia <--> Hydrogen + Methoxyamine / Aminomethanol
HOCH3 + NH3 <--> H2 + H3CONH2 / HOCH2NH2

These seem (to me) to be ridiculous, but maybe I am missing something. If you are still trying to learn some basic chemistry, Wikipedia is a good place to learn, but you would benefit from working with experienced editors before writing silly stuff that misleads readers.--Smokefoot (talk) 17:51, 20 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

How are those ridiculous? At higher pressures, hydrogen gas can be released. I have no references, but the reactions are just basic replacement reactions in equilibrium. This is the natural mechanism of production. Water + Ammonia <--> Hydrogen + Hydroxylamine. Is that reaction incorrect somehow? --User:Zuloo37 5:39, 21 August 2014 (UTC)
Sorry, but your thinking is childish. Please ask for help and advice before adding misleading content. --Smokefoot (talk) 12:57, 21 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
Please do explain how these reactions are childish. I see no problem with them. Everything balances out. These reactions actually happen, though maybe not on Earth right now, but they definitely happened in the past, and they are an essential step for life to evolve that would be ridiculous not to include. Titan has a eutectic mixture of water and ammonia beneath its surface, and it quite regularly releases water, ammonia, hydrogen and hydroxylamine from cryovolcanoes on the surface, and the hydroxylamine reacts with methane in the atmosphere to form amino alcohols, releasing more hydrogen. I am only being logical. --User:Zuloo37 23:00 21 August 2014 (UTC)
Okay, I've compiled a little list of reactions that you, for some reason, appear to have a problem with:
2 H2O <--> H2 + H2O2
2 H2O <--> 2 H2 + O2
2 NH3 <--> H2 + N2H4
2 NH3 <--> 2 H2 + N2H2
2 NH3 <--> 3 H2 + N2
NH3 + H2O <--> H2 + NH2OH
NH3 + H2O <--> 2 H2 + HNO
2 CH4 <--> H2 + C2H6
2 CH4 <--> 2 H2 + C2H4
2 CH4 <--> 3 H2 + C2H2
CH4 + H2O <--> H2 + CH3OH
CH4 + NH3 <--> H2 + CH3NH2
Please explain how, if at all, these reactions are incorrect. --User:Zuloo37 15:39 22 August 2014 (UTC)

October 2014

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  • in an exothermic reaction (-253 kJ/mol) to form the simplest [[amino acid]], [[glycine]] and water.}}

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November 2014

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