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{{For|the Wikipedia policy about sources|WP:Verifiability}}
{{For|the Wikipedia policy about sources|WP:Verifiability}}

Revision as of 18:14, 21 January 2015

This essay, WP:Suggested sources (or WP:Find_sources), relates to ways to find reliable sources, depending on the particular topic (see below: List of suggested sources). There are the general Wikipedia policies:

  • WP:Reliable sources (WP:RS) - rules about determining reliable sources
  • WP:Verifiability (WP:V) - rules about writing verifiable text.
  • WP:BLP - rules about living people, and what not to quote from sources.

Other essays:

Specific questions:

However, editors new to a particular topic might not realize some specific major publications are preferred as sources. Guideline WP:MEDRS suggests sources for medical text, but other subjects need recommendations for reliable sources, as well.

The term "reliable" is a relative measure, depending on context. The answer to the question, "Is X a reliable source?"  should always be "For what?"  because expert publications might be better sources to back rare details, whereas news reports cover general aspects. For example, a top newspaper is typically unable to match the expertise of a medical journal or computer-technology magazine, but news reports are the most likely to have recent information, for major facts (but not for precise technical details, which are sometimes mistaken in general news reports).

List of suggested sources

There are thousands of reliable sources, but perhaps consider the following list, as a start:

Topics covered by print encyclopedias

Current news

The above-mentioned list is just a small list of suggestions, but it provides a specific starting point for editors unfamiliar with the major sources covering each specific field.

See also