Talk:Ad libitum

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[edit] Content copied over from Talk:Ad lib

(Shrug) Dysprosia, I'll let it be, certainly not worth an edit war, but my dictionary (American Heritage 3rd and 4th editions) lists the two terms under separate entries; that is, I still think they are two different terms, not two different forms of the same term.

I don't think they should be separate articles—including both in the same article seems sensible to me. But I still believe the article should be arranged something like this:

Ad lib and Ad-lib are related but distinct terms. Both are abbreviations of ad libitum which is Latin for "at liberty."
Ad lib, without a hyphen, is an adverb meaning...
Ad-lib, with a hyphen, the commoner term, is a noun or verb meaning...
My dictionary says them under two different terms too, but the differences between the two definitions are rather negligible, boiling down to the distinction between "ad lib" being the adj/adv term, while "ad-lib" being the noun term. What do you feel is the main distinction between the two? Dysprosia 04:56, 21 Dec 2003 (UTC)

[edit] Examples?

I wonder if we should add a few examples of well-known ad libs in film and TV by way of illustration? 23skidoo 20:31, 14 May 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Merge proposal