Wikipedia:Main Page/Test

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Welcome to Wikipedia, our multilingual, free-content encyclopedia. Since January 2001 we've written 6,819,595 articles in the English version. To learn how you can edit any article right now, visit the Community Main Page or experiment in the sandbox.

Featured article

John Oliver, comedian
John Oliver, comedian

Our Lady of Perpetual Exemption was a legally recognized church in the United States established by the comedian and satirist John Oliver (pictured). Announced on August 16, 2015, in an episode of the television program Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, the church's purpose was to highlight and criticize televangelists, such as Kenneth Copeland and Robert Tilton, who Oliver argued used television broadcasts of Christian church services for private gain. Oliver also established Our Lady of Perpetual Exemption to draw attention to the tax-exempt status given to churches. During his show on September 13, 2015, Oliver announced that the church had received "thousands of dollars" and a variety of other items from viewers, and stated that the Church would be shutting down. All monetary donations were given to Doctors Without Borders. Oliver set up spinoffs of the Church in 2018 and 2021. The segments and later spinoff segments featured the comedian Rachel Dratch as Oliver's fictional wife, Wanda Jo. (Full article...)

Recently featured:


Zimmerman Telegram
Zimmerman Telegram

On February 24, ..

Recent days: February 23 - February 22

Did you know ...?

Fredy Clue wearing Bäckadräkten
Fredy Clue wearing Bäckadräkten


In the news

Jeremiah Manele in 2023
Jeremiah Manele

Holidays

{{Holidays}}

Obituaries

  • Italian cyclist Marco Pantani died suddenly at a hotel in Rimini, Italy on February 14.
  • Former Chechen president Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev was killed in an apparent car bomb explosion on February 13.
  • Former leader of the Canadian liberal party, Claude Ryan, died from stomach cancer on February 9 at age 79.

Browse Wikipedia by topic

Mathematical and Natural Sciences

Astronomy - Biology - Chemistry - Computer science - Earth science - Ecology - Health science - Mathematics - Physics - Statistics

Applied Arts and Sciences

Agriculture - Architecture - Business - Communication - Education - Engineering - Family and consumer science - Finance - Government - Law - Library and information science - Marketing - Medicine - Politics - Public affairs - Software engineering - Technology - Transport

Social Sciences and Philosophy

Anthropology - Archaeology - Economics - Geography - History - History of science and technology - Language - Linguistics - Mythology - Philosophy - Political science - Psychology - Sociology

Culture and Fine Arts

Classics - Cuisine - Dance - Entertainment - Film - Games - Gardening - Handicraft - Hobbies - Holidays - Internet - Literature - Music - Opera - Painting - Poetry - Radio - Recreation - Religion - Sculpture - Sports - Television - Theater - Tourism - Visual arts and design

Other Category Schemes

About our category schemes - Alphabetical order by title - By category - By academic discipline - Historical timeline - Themed timelines - Calendar - Reference tables - Biographies - Countries - How-tos

Wikipedia in other languages

Wikipedia language list - Afrikaans - ‮العربية ‬ (Araby) - Bahasa Indonesia - Bahasa Melayu - Bosanski - Български (Bulgarian) - Català - Česká - Corsu - Cymraeg - Dansk - Deutsch - Eesti - Español - Ελληνικά - Esperanto - Euskara - فارسی (Persian) - Français - Frysk - Galego - 한국어 (Hangukeo) - עברית (Hebrew) - हिन्दी (Hindi) - Hrvatski - Interlingua - Italiano - Kurdî - Latina - Latviešu - Lietuvių - Magyar - Maori - Nahuatl - Nederlands - 日本語 (Nihongo) - Norsk - Occitan - Plattdüütsch - Polski - Português - Română - Русский (Russkiy) - Shqip - Simple English - Slovensko - Српски (Srpski) - Suomeksi - Svenska - தமிழ் (Tamil) - Tiếng Việt - Türkçe - 中文 (简) - 中文 (繁) - Start a new edition

Sister Projects

Wiktionary - Wikibooks - Wikiquote - Wikisource - Meta-Wikipedia - 9-11 Memorial