These three are the only pending requests for Wikiquote and Wikivoyage projects 
dating back to 2012.


Wikiquote 
Pashto<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_new_languages/Wikiquote_Pashto>
 (ps):  Eligible.

Wikivoyage 
Malayam<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_new_languages/Wikivoyage_Malayalam>
 (ml): Eligible.


Wikiquote 
Syriac<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_new_languages/Wikiquote_Syriac>
 (syc):  Syriac, of course, is a historic language. Frankly, there are 
arguments to be made on either side of this one.


Leaning towards "eligible":

  *   There is a Wikipedia in this language already. Frequently, languages with 
Wikipedias are allowed to expand into other projects.
  *   In 2010 Milos marked a Wikiquote test in Ancient Greek as "eligible". 
Possibly this case isn't much different, except that more people know Ancient 
Greek than know Classical Syriac. (But see below.)

Leaning towards "reject" (outright):

  *   The written policy on historical languages reads, "The proposal has a 
sufficient number of living native speakers to form a viable community and 
audience." I have the impression that at this point, LangCom is starting to 
loosen up a little about whether the speakers are "native" speakers, as long as 
there are enough (reasonably) fluent speakers to form a viable community. But 
that "loosening" seems to apply mostly to Wikipedias (e.g., Coptic), and 
certainly not to Wikinews or Wikivoyage. I'm not sure about Wikiquote, as 
Ancient Greek is the only example to look to. And in any case, I'm not sure 
that Classical Syriac really has enough speakers to create a community; in 
that, the case potentially differs from Ancient Greek.

What about "reject" (stale)?

  *   There are about 14 pages in the test; all (except maybe one) were created 
in the first three months of its existence. Since then, the test has been 
pretty dormant. So far, tests that I have closed as stale have had no more than 
five pages created, and those generally within the same month of starting the 
test project. So while this test has been fairly dormant, it's been more active 
than that.

I'd appreciate some opinions on what to do here. I will say straight out that 
even if the decision is to reject, I see no reason that the test can't stay on 
Incubator, as it meets the less stringent requirements for a test to be hosted 
on Incubator. So you're deciding between


  *   Rejecting outright, but test remains on Incubator, probably permanently
  *   Marking eligible (consistent with what was done with Ancient Greek)

Steven


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