Category talk:Prime ministers of Australia

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Proposed move to Category:Prime ministers of Australia (proposed by User:Foroa)

[edit]
  •  Oppose : Here in Australia, the custom is to refer to Prime Minister when you're referring to the office and/or its holder : See http://www.nma.gov.au/education/school_resources/websites_and_interactives/primeministers/ . Secondly, I refer to Wikipedia's own rules on captalising compound nouns : both parts or neither. See : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style_(capital_letters) . Yes, when used at the start of a sentence is mentioned as an exception. But - we are not talking about use at the start of sentences here, we are talking about use as Category names, which reflect the formal title of an incumbent : i.e. "This is a category containing media about people who have held the formal title "Prime Minister of Australia". The only correct use of the term prime minister would be in a sentence referring to the general role, not a specific person : e..g. "In the past, a prime minister would blah blah..." you would never write "In the past, a Prime minister would...". We could say "Prime ministers in the past ...." because we are referring to prime ministers in a general sense and the first word is capitalised only because it begins a sentence. To extend this very limited rule to category names, which by definition refer to a formal title and its incumbents, of which there is only a single incumbent at any time, is invalid. It is also invalid to use the existing incorrect use of Category:Prime ministers of Xyz to justify its perpetuation for Australia. It would be more correct to change all categories to Category:Prime Ministers of Xyz. However, even if the existing parent category remains Category:Prime ministers by country, I strongly oppose reversion of this category to Prime ministers of Australia : there never has been such a thing as a Prime minister of Australia. Rcbutcher (talk) 10:55, 28 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]
As explained in en:Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style_(capital_letters)#Titles_of_people it is stated:
  • "Offices, positions, and job titles such as president, king, emperor, pope, bishop, abbot, executive director are common nouns and therefore start with a capital letter only when followed by a person's name", which is not the case for prime ministers of Australia.
  • "In the case of a compound word such as "prime minister" or "chief executive officer", either all parts begin with a capital letter or none (except, obviously, at the beginning of a sentence)", which is the case here.
 Support We are coherent with en:Prime minister and partly with the body of en:Prime Minister of Australia. see Category talk:Prime ministers too. --Foroa (talk) 12:23, 28 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]