rdfs:comment | - The Wiki's database includes an area for a single-letter (R, S, N or O) representing the level of canonicity of that element; these letters have since informally been applied to the levels of canon themselves: R-canon/C-Canon, S-canon, N-canon, and O-canon. As part of his work with the Wiki, Darth__Revan was responsible for the creation of this classification, and he spent the early stages developing and refining them into what they are today.
- Chercher "canon" sur dicod'Òc (dictionnaires en ligne sur le site du Congrès permanent de la lenga occitana)
- The A Song of Ice and Fire canon refers to materials either written by or approved by George R.R. Martin that are considered "official" for the history and events of the setting. The Song of Ice and Fire canon consists of works that fully canonical, semi-canonical (or canon until proven otherwise) and non-canon.
- Canon is 'true Star Wars', while non-canon is not 'true Star Wars' and does not fit with the Star Wars storyline.
- Les canons sont utilisés pour tirer des projectiles, y compris des personnages. La plupart du temps, ils tirent des boulets de canon. Ils ont une apparence plus générique que celle des Bill Boum qui tirent spécifiquement des Bill Balles.
- Canon is any information, facts, and/or statements that are part of the official history of a fictional franchise. Its opposite is fanon, fan-made history that is not endorsed or acknowledged by a series' creator. Canon is not limited to the information that appears in novels, anime or manga; it can also include data found profiles in official books and magazines, or comments from the creators during interviews. This article is a stub. You can help KanzakaDex by [ expanding it].
- Canon is "any material that is considered to be "genuine", or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator of a series". The canon of the Smallville television show is considered source material for this site, the Smallville wiki. This is a partial and emerging list of all material that is considered canon.
- Canon er simpelthen når noget gælder som værende "rigtigt". Der er 4 forskellige slags Canon:
* G-Canon er 'George Lucas-Canon'. G-canon er den øverste canon. Filmene hører herunder.
* C-Canon er bøger, tegneserier og tegnefilm.
* S-Canon er 'Sekundær Canon'. Officellie bøger og tegneserier der ikke 'passer' ind i kontinuiteten. mange af dem er fra 70'erne og 80'erne. Marvel tegneserierne hører herunder. Den indbefatter bla. Dark Empire serierne.
* N-Canon også kendt som Non-Canon er alt som ikke har noget med det "rigtige" Star Wars univers at gøre.
- Canon is a debatable term when it comes to the Homeworld series, as the series has changed ownership several times and different companies and different personnel have worked on them. After the release of Homeworld 2 in 2003 it was arguable that there was no-one to determine what was canon in the Homeworld universe and what was not. The acquisition of the Homeworld intellectual property in 2013 by Gearbox Software and the development of both Homeworld Remastered and Homeworld: Shipbreakers has changed this situation again, with the Homeworld franchise now a going concern. However, the new owners of the franchise have not yet made definitive statements on what is canon and what is not.
- \'ka-nen\ (n.) — a sanctioned or accepted group or body of related works For other uses, see Canon (fiction). TRON canon is defined primarily by the movies, TRON and TRON: Legacy. These sources are further built on by events portrayed in TRON: Legacy's tie-ins in games and print media, although these additions are known to present deviations from events depicted in the movies.
- Canon, for the purposes of this wiki, refers to the live-action television episodes and motion pictures of the Star Trek franchise.
- Canon refers to all the information arising from the original, or officially sanctions, material. In Supernatural, in addition to the TV Show, canon covers material in the:
* Official Site
*
* Supernatural novels: Nevermore, Witch's Canyon among others. The notion of what comprises the canon is subjective, and both fans and the creators of a body of material will have differing opinions on the topic. On this Wiki, canon from sources other that the TV Show contains a superscript tag to indicate its source, so readers can ascribe their own hierarchy or value to the information.
- Canon is a pattern of established information concerning fiction. It establishes what stuff is real and what stuff is baloney. To say that a piece of information is non-canonical means that said information should not be held as trustworthy, especially if it conflicts established facts.
- Canon is contrasted with Fanon.
- Canon refers to the "official" parts of a story. Here, it refers to facts (events, characters, locations etc.) that are considered to "officially" appear in the GTA universe.
- Canon is published by DC Comics under the CMX imprint. Current price per volume is $9.99.
- Jagex tries at every possible opportunity to keep to the established canon, but there is still dispute about certain subjects, especially on sketchy and highly-speculated subjects, such as the history of gods like Zaros and the Menaphite Pantheon.
- Canon in Baldur's Gate universe usually revolves around the so-called canon party that travels with Gorion's Ward in-between the events of Baldur's Gate (game) (or Baldur's Gate: Siege of Dragonspear) and Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn. Sometimes canon can also refer to Forgotten Realms canon.
- Canon significa cualquier información que sea aceptada ampliamente y oficialmente como un hecho y la verdad por las autoridades preeminentes sobre el tema. Wikipedia tiene esto que decir: "Canon, en términos de un universo de ficción, es cualquier material que se considera que es" verdadero", o se puede referenciar directamente como material producido por el autor original o creador de una serie." En cuanto a Death Note, las autoridades son los creadores del manga: Tsugumi Ohba y Takeshi Obata.
- There are many inconsistencies and contradictions in . In order to present a consistent view of Enderverse events and history, a special interpretation of canon material has been created for use on the wiki.
- Canon are things that are accepted as being apart of the Star Wars story line.
- Canon is a term used to describe "official" material within a fictional work. Within the context of Bully, canon refers to what takes place or is described in the game itself.
- Anyone who pays attention to canon will have their planet destroyed. That means you, too.
- Whenever an author writes a series, everything he or she wrote themselves is considered canon. To put it more simply, canon is the original material that was stated by the writer in their work.
- In terms of works of fiction or fictional universes, canon describes works that are considered more important or more "real" than others, i.e. "official" works. While the canonical status of non-television works set in the Buffyverse isn't always clear, the fictional universe's creator, Joss Whedon, has defined others as definitely canon.
- Canon is material officially considered part of the primary continuity. See also Wikipedia:Canon (fiction).
- Als Canon (oder auch Kanon) werden fundierte Fakten zu einem Werk oder einer Ansammlung von Werken bezeichnet. Auch die Star Trek Welt muss sich auf einen Canon einigen, da es bis heute unzählige Filme und Episoden und darüber hinaus Bücher, Spiele etc. gibt.
- Cada vez que un autor escribe una serie, todo lo que él o ella escribió por sí mismos se considera canónico. Para decirlo más simplemente, el canon es el material original que fue expuesto por el escritor en su trabajo.
- "Canon" means any information that is widely and officially accepted as fact and truth by preeminent authorities on the subject. Wikipedia has this to say: "Canon, in terms of a fictional universe, is any material that is considered to be "genuine", or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator of a series." In regards to Death Note, it's authorities are the manga's two creators: author Tsugumi Ohba and artist Takeshi Obata.
- Canon is een begrip dat omschreven wordt als de officiële of vaak geaccepteerde richtlijn in de wereld van fictie en fantasy. Ook op Duckstad Wiki, en ook vaak op internetfora, wordt een canon gehanteerd. We onderscheiden drie lagen canonniteit waarin je elk verhaal of elke informatie in kan plaatsen.
- Canon is not defined in the Matrix franchise. The three films, The Matrix, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions form the main core of the series, with additional short animated films, video games and comics created by the Wachowskis and other artists. Some of these tie directly into the films, while others are more ambiguous.
- Note well: the canon as defined here is currently incomplete, is probably inconsistent, and would seem inherently resistant to the admission of both completeness and consistency.
- There are four major classifications for canon when it comes to Vilous and it's related species and characters.
- Le canon est une arme à feu tubulaire de grande taille destinée à lancer des boulets, ou des nains à très grande distance, dans le but de faire exploser des trucs comme des châteaux forts, des châteaux de cartes ou les vertèbres du nain qu'on avait mis dans le canon. L'usage du canon est quelque peu tombé en désuétude de nos jours, ce qui explique en très grande partie la recrudescence des boulets, et des nains. Et qui dit recrudescence, dit hausse des prix à la pompe. C'est donc dans un but plus déflationniste que déflagrationniste que nous allons coiffer le canon au peigne fin, exposer ses objectifs plutôt que de les exploser, et continuer à nous moquer des nains, qui en plus d'être d'excellentes chairs à canons, sont petits et personnellement, me font assez peur.
- As a result of Jane’s tip, the police bring Ella in for questioning about Sydney’s murder. Ella naturally downplays the tension between her and Sydney prior to the murder. Meanwhile, Lauren is torn between going on a shopping date with Riley for her wedding and impressing her new boss Wendi who just set her up on a "date." A stunned Jonah is accused of stealing a diamond necklace from a mansion he videotaped for a realtor, but becomes even more upset after Ella mentions a similar necklace that she saw in David’s apartment. Elsewhere, Violet maliciously sabotages another employee at Coal so she can get closer to Auggie.
- Canon: Canon means what the author/editor/creators/writers determines what is consider as part of the continuity of their story and a direct opposite of Non-Canon or Filler sometimes editors determine whats canon other times its up to the team of people who help create it and whats Canon.
- Canon (nom non-officiel) est un sort de Picto Magie, exclusif à l'anime.
- Canon is what we in the Templars of Twilight consider to be true to our "Templarverse". Our canon attempts to remain within the realms and boundaries of current canon. Either avoiding direct interaction with canon, or working within it in a manner that would allow it to not interfere. And example of this would be when the Templars acted as 'nameless' pilots of Sekotan fighters over Coruscant.
- Canon refers to a group of works considered to be central, vital, and legitimate in some field. One of its more common uses is in describing which books are considered valid parts of the Bible, with various Christian denominations using slightly different lists. In broader use, one sees applications such as "fan fiction is not considered canonical in the lore of Star Trek".
- Here the 'canon' of the MUSH is detailed, the reference of what material available outside the game is considered to be IC or 'a part of' the galaxy of the MUSH.
- Canon is the material accepted as officially part of the story in an individual universe of that story. Events and Characters who are considered canon are likely to have an effect on the overall continuity of the Universe. For D.Gray-man is considered canon the material which is produced by the Author Hoshino Katsura.
- From Wikipedia: While every single player-made character could be considered non-canon, the characters are what we would like to consider "Community-Canon," making them canonical in the Warcraft community. Non-canon would then, in turn, be considered non-community-canon.
- Canon has a primary listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the TOPIX index. It has a secondary listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
- Canon manufactures a line of camcorders that range from inexpensive MiniDV camcorders to professional camcorders.
- Canon is alle informatie die officieel wordt gerekend als een deel van het Star Wars universum. In 2014 werd het canon opnieuw gestart. De films, Star Wars: The Clone Wars en Star Wars: Rebels behoorden tot het canon, maar ook alle comics, boeken, kortverhalen en games die vanaf de zomer van 2014 zijn verschijnen.
- El canon es una remuneración compensatoria cobrada por la SGAE por las supuestas perdidas que ocasiona la piratéria.Afecta a todo aparato que sea capaz de guardar sonido,imprimir e incluso los vehículos de transmision de datos(ADSL).Con lo cual se puede chupar mucho dinero sin trabajar a costa del resto de trabajadores españoles explotados en sus empresas por 1000 euros.O sea,un robo
- [[Archivo:Jo_rowling.jpg|thumb|J. K. Rowling. Autora de Harry Potter. la Información que procede de ella es considerada la mayor fuente de canon en la Harry Potter Wiki.]] Canon es una palabra usada para describir una colección específica de textos relacionados a una temática o serie determinada.
- En Dragon Ball Z existen ciertos rellenos que fueron ideas del propio Akira Toriyama. El ejemplo más notorio son los episodios donde aparece Launch dado que Toriyama explicó que la historia de Launch y Ten Shin Han no podía ser contada en el manga pero sí podía profundizarse en el anime. Otro relleno pensado por él sería cuando Goku desprende un trozo de nube para comer pues Toriyama dijo "Goku no cruzaría un millón de kilómetros sin comer algo".
- Canon comes from the religious language, referring to the books and writings that make up authentic Scripture. In fiction and games, it refers to the elements of the fictional universe which are presumed to be true by other media referring to the same world. Sometimes items can become non-canon, pseudo-canon, or alternate canon, depending on the editorial direction taken by the series.
- Canon is official, endorsed work by the creator / author of a piece of work (such as a video game, a book, a movie, etc.)
- Canon is the body of fiction that we consider to have actually happened on the Transformers Universe MUX. Overall, on the MUX we consider the 80s Transformers cartoon and the 80s Marvel G.I. Joe comic series to be canon. We occasionally bring in elements from other sources (for example, the Transformers comic and the G.I. Joe cartoon), but if there's any conflict, the primary canon is the definitive source.
- The "authenticity" of information. Canon describes whether or not something is imperically verified in game. The only true canon source is the game itself.
- Considering the breadth of the Star Wars universe (including books, movies, toys, video games, etc) the issue of canon is an important one to Star Wars MUSH. In short, what should be considered official to the in character (IC) universe? Even excluding obvious sources that would be universally unpopular and a poor fit with the existing game (the Star Wars Christmas Special for example) there is still a great deal of possible reasonable lattitude in this area. Nonetheless, the MUSH administration have a very clear position on canon as it relates to theme.
- The term "Canon" denotes the material accepted as "official". It is often contrasted with, or used as the basis for, works of fanfiction and other fanworks, which are not considered canonical. In the case of South Park, the canon consists of all episodes excluding "City on the Edge of Forever", due to being a dream, and "Pip", due to taking place in Victorian England. The canonicity of the original Spirit of Christmas shorts, and the episode "Terrance and Phillip in Not Without My Anus" is disputable.
- Canon is another word for official. The primary use of the term is to distinguish official settings and stories from individual troupes' chronicles and other fan-made fiction and resources. The secondary use of the term is to establish the official facts of a fictional setting (and, sometimes, to retroactively alter those facts in a retcon). Generally speaking, when the term "canon" is used on this wiki, the use of both definitions is implied.
- Canon is a word used to describe a fixed collection of text. In Arthur Ransome Wiki, canon refers to the following: 1.
* Written works by Arthur Ransome 2.
* Information from Arthur Ransome, from interviews, notes, diaries as long as it does not contradict a higher source, unless it purports to be correcting a higher source (for example, the 1929-1930-1931 paradox) 3.
* Information from films, TV series etc based on Arthur Ransome works can be considered canon as long as it does not contradict a higher source
- Categoría:Esbozos [[Archivo:Era-inf.png|thumb|Por definición, los Infinities son no-canon]] Star Wars canon fue definido por primera vez en el primer número de la revista de Lucasfilm, Star Wars Insider:
- The word Canon refers to the collection of stories, writings, and facts within a fictional universe which are considered true, or official material. This term comes from the Bible, and originally refers to the books included therein, excluding apocrypha (The books that were left out of the Bible and other works). This article discusses the canon of the Paper Computer Game universe.
- thumb|250pxCanon is de absolute waarheid van religie, literatuur en fictie. Ook de verhalen van Tolkien hebben een canon. Hoewel dat bij de verhalen van Tolkien eigenlijk voor iedereen anders is en sommige vinden dat er geen echte Canon is. Een reden hiervoor is dat er vele versies van verhalen zijn. Op bijvoorbeeld de Nederlandse wikipedia zeggen dat canon de Silmarillion, In de ban van de ring en de Hobbit is. Dus de eerste boeken die uit gegeven zijn.
- The term Canon refers to the source material of a given series. In the Legend of Zelda series, as well as the rest of fiction, the term refers to anything which has been established as fact by official sources, most particularly the games themselves and their manuals. It is canonical fact, for example, that all first-born daughters born in the Royal Family of Hyrule are to be named Zelda; this was established in the backstory for Zelda II: The Adventure of Link. Some things which go against canon are regarded as non-canon, because they are not established as fact. For example it is non-canon that Link fought Mario as seen in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. The term fanon refers to any information regarding the series created by fans, unincluded in official mediums, and is considered non-canon.
- Canon eli kaanoni on fillerin vastakohta. Sillä tarkoitetaan sisältöä, jota ei ole luotu Ne Pece -wikian artikkelin kirjoittamisen yhteydessä. Kaanoni on lähtöisin joko keskusteluista, piirroksista, mesetöherryksistä, dubbisarjasta, runoista tai vastaavista. Jotta jutusta tulee kaanonia, on siitä käytävä vähintään kahden keskeistä keskustelua.
- The Wiki believes that Rowling's word is law. Any material she has written or was involved in or has stated is canon is the highest level of canon - even the illustrations, drawings, hand-lettering etc. that she created are part of that. The Wiki also considers the texts written in their original language, J.K. Rowling's British English and editions with corrections she approved are the most valuable. When J.K. Rowling contradicts herself, the newest source is to be taken as the "most" canon.
- The last Canon was encountered by SG-1 when they arrived on the planet via the Stargate. He branded SG-1 as demons due to them coming from the "Circle of Darkness" (the local's name for the Stargate), and attempted to sacrifice them, along with a girl named Mary, to a Goa'uld with a Unas (Demons) host sent by Sokar.
- Mentre Star Trek diventava sempre più popolare e le dimensioni del suo universo crescevano, negli anni '80, i fan si trovarono di fronte al problema di come trattare la crescente collezione di episodi, film, romanzi, fumetti, manuali tecnici e altro. La definizione del canone di Star Trek, può variare tra i diversi appassionati, per questo motivo per fonti di riferimento come Memory Alpha, la questione diventa specialmente difficoltosa.
- The Wikipedia:Wikipedia definition of the word Wikipedia:canon includes the following definition: In fiction, canon is the officially authorized interpretation of characters and events. It is also sometimes described as "part of a fictional universe which has inarguable validity within". In fandom, the term is often used to distinguish between "canonical" accounts (i.e. those authorized by the copyright holder) and those of fanfiction, sometimes called fanon. In serial fiction, new material can contradict earlier material (a practice known as retconning), in which case the new material becomes canon. Publishers, especially in mainstream comic books, sometimes release "what-if" stories featuring non-canonical interpretations of their characters.
- Canon, in the context of a fictional universe, comprises those novels, stories, films, etc., that are considered to be genuine or officially sanctioned, and those events, characters, settings, etc., that are considered to have existence within the fictional universe. In order for a setting to appear cohesive, especially in fictions that contain multiple parts, both creators and audiences sometimes find it useful to define what has and has not "actually happened" in that universe.
- In the context of fiction, the canon of a fictional universe comprises those novels, stories, films, etc. that are considered to be genuine (or "official"), and those events, characters, settings, etc. that are considered to have inarguable existence within the universe. Usually items that are considered canon come from the original source of the universe while non-canon material comes from adaptations or unofficial items. See Image Comics Database:Universe Structure for more information about universe designations.
- Canon : In fiction, canon is the material accepted as officially part of the story in an individual universe of that story. Unfortunately later works in the same fictional 'universe' can directly contradict earlier 'Canon' (particularly when part of primary narrations, instead of mentions in dialog/thoughts of characters which might potentially be interpretation/opinion and NOT fact). This can lead to questions of that new material Who authoritatively is allowed this acceptance is also a matter of opinion (as in the case of sloppy later works by the same author). . . .
- To understand canon and continuity, the overall Star Wars saga should be looked at as a set of stories written by many different people which "document" past "events." Although some stories are more reliable than others, they all are looked upon as part of the overall "history." It should also be remembered that all of these stories are simply that—stories. There are numerous errors that inevitably arise between the stories simply because different authors have their own ways of telling the story and may not have the time and resources to perfectly align the details. This site deals with non-canon material by putting red text notification above the non-canon items.
- Canon, based in Japan, is one of the largest camera and lens manufacturers. Its lineup includes advanced SLRs as well as point-and-shoots. Unlike its chief rival Nikon, Canon also sells printers, copiers and such office machines besides cameras.
- The term Canon is generally used to refer to content, material, or information which is generally agreed to be authoritative and accurate. In fiction, Canon is often used to refer to the stories and elements of fictional worlds viewed as 'official' or 'approved.' In other words, Canon is the recognized, accepted and binding stories, backstory, plots, and elements that are seen as being 'accurate' or 'real' in the context of the fictional setting. Canon is most often seen as that content or information which is by and large seen as factual, established and set. It is also thus the content and information upon which all future development must hinge and respect.
- Canon is a word used to describe a fixed collection of text. In Tintin Wiki, canon refers to the following: 1.
* Latest of published Works by Herge 2.
* Information from earlier published works by Herge if not contradicted by later works 3.
* Information from Herge, from interviews, notes, diaries as long as it does not contradict a higher source, unless it is correcting a higher source 4.
* Information from films, TV series etc based on Herge's works, made with the permission of Herge or his agents or executors can be considered canon as long as it does not contradict a higher source
- Canon, in the context of a fictional universe, comprises those novels, stories, films, etc., that are considered to be genuine or officially sanctioned, and those events, characters, settings, etc., that are considered to have existence within the fictional universe. In order for a setting to appear coherent, especially in fictions that contain multiple parts, both creators and audiences sometimes find it useful to define what has and has not "actually happened" in that universe.
- Canon, in terms of a fictional universe, is any material that is considered to be "genuine," or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator. For Forever Knight, canon refers collectively to those facts or ideas that were actually stated or seen in an of the television series, Forever Knight. Forever Knight canon includes:
* information in scenes in the Canadian version of the episodes, which was cut when they were shown in the United States. Forever Knight canon does not include:
- A mesure que Star Trek s'est développé, les fans se sont retrouvés face au problème de comment traiter la masse d'informations sans cesse grandissante issue des épisodes, films, romans, comics, manuels techniques, jeux vidéos, etc. La position officielle de Paramount Pictures est de considérer que les évènements, personnages, lieux... qui ont été définis dans les épisodes et films sont canons. Ceux qui sont définis dans les romans, dans les comics, ou dans les jeux, etc... ne le sont pas.
- Star Wars canon refers to the material related to the Star Wars universe that is officially considered to belong to the continuity, or storyline, of that universe. Because the Star Wars universe is a fictional one, elements of its continuity (i.e. historical events, character traits or actions, etc.) can change over time, having pieces added, removed, or overwritten. However, changing of the canon is generally discouraged.
- Canon var en manlig människa och han var den religiösa ledaren för en människa samhälle vars civilisation var i nivå med medeltida Europa. Canons hade en ring kan kalla "gudomliga vreden" i form av blixtar. Denna ring, antas av SG-1 till Goa'uld teknologi, har traditionellt gått genom historien från en Canon till en annan.
- Kanon (written as Canon in the Del Rey and Kondansha Comics) (奏音 ?) is Ringo's Tuner and Kururu Sumeragi's cousin. He has an obsession for Ringo and seems to harbor romantic intentions, but some of his ambitions shatter when he openly plots to tamper with Ikki's A-T's. He presses on in his disregard for Tool Toul To's neutrality by actively battling against Kogarasumaru, though he at least seems to respect their leader.
- Canon is a term used to designate what is considered "official" in a certain fictional universe. With few possible exceptions only canon material is featured in the character pages. Non-canon material doesn't count - it never happened. The generally agreed-upon definition is that the work by the original author and creator of the fictional setting is canon, unless the author or the copyright holder declares otherwise. Few other exceptions are also possible and should be noted on the verse page.
- For consistency, the following levels of canon can be accepted in the Dune wiki. 1.
* Original Dune novels by Frank Herbert. Absolute canon. 2.
* Expanded Dune, such as Legends of Dune, Prelude to Dune, Heroes of Dune, Sequels of Dune and all novels by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson. Official, but questionable, canon. 3.
* The Dune Encyclopedia. Although sanctioned by Frank Herbert himself, it is also Expanded Dune. It was recognized and admitted as non-canon by Willis E. McNelly himself in a relevant letter. 4.
* Dune movies, mini-series and video games are non-canon but official licensed products. Original concepts introduced by those works (for example House Ordos) can deserve individual articles but should always be noted as non-canon. Canon articles should conta
- Star Wars: Exodus has uniquely shaped its own version of "canon" for Star Wars. While We do follow Star Wars canon up until our "breakaway" point in our uniquely crafted timeline, we do not strictly adhere to Star Wars canon after a certain point in time. Previously, this was after the events of Return of the Jedi in what we are now branding as our own Legends canon. Our new canon's "breakaway" point is two years prior to the events that occur in The Force Awakens. However, it should be noted that, as the new Star Wars canon develops, we will be adapting to it to as deemed appropriate to our own storytelling. For more information, please refer to our official rules for this new storyline.
- Canon refers to the characteristics of a particular book, movie, TV show, etc., that make up a plot continuum, as opposed to fanon. Canon can also mean the works themselves. For example, the Harry Potter canon, which is one of the simpler examples, is the seven novels and two shorter books by J.K. Rowling. Harry, Ron, Hermione, Snape, and the other characters in the books are called canon characters or sometimes just "canons."
- Paramount Pictures and other "Powers That Be" have determined, for Star Trek, that all live-action series and feature films released by the copyright owner are canon. Some books, such as Star Trek Encyclopedia and Star Trek Chronology, are also seen as canon or having canon information until information "on-screen" contradicts them. Anything outside these categories, even if produced or sanctioned by Paramount, is not considered canon. The canon live-action series and movies are:
- To understand canon and continuity, the overall The Elder Scrolls series should be looked at as a set of stories written by many different people which "document" historical "events." Although some stories are more reliable than others, they all are looked upon as part of the overall "history." It should also be remembered that all of these stories are simply that—stories. There are numerous errors that inevitably arise between the stories simply because different authors have their own ways of telling the story and may not have the time and resources to perfectly align the details.
- The highest level of canon is the original Kinnikuman manga by Yudetamago, published in Weekly Shonen Jump. This shows the original story by the creator's themselves. It's because of this that all information found in the manga is canon unless stated otherwise.
- Canon is a term used to describe anything that can be used as a source of information when writing an article on a wiki. It is used by a great number of wikis to mean a great number of things; sometimes it describes books, sometimes films, websites, video games, images, comments made in passing by the author or even other articles. On the Potter Dictionary Wiki, however, the term canon denotes the ten Harry Potter books:
- Canon is a fan-based idea that exists in a unique way within Doctor Who fandom. In theory, it means a body of work that an established body of literature that can draw upon, but it is more commonly thought as what a fan considers what forms part of the Doctor Who universe, or what "really happened". This is often a personal choice, one which is endlessly discussed and argued about in just about every Doctor Who-related forum or message board that has existed on the internet. Unlike the Star Trek and Star Wars universes, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has never made a pronouncement about what is or is not canon for Doctor Who. In August 2010 however, the BBC did make a fleeting reference to canon, in relation to their Doctor Who: The Adventure Games, stating in their press relea
- Der Begriff Canon (\'ka-nen\ (n.)) ist eine definierte Ansammlung von Inhalten, die besondere Anerkennung genießen. Dieser Begriff stammt von „Kanon“ ab – eine Sammlung bedeutender, als gut anerkannter Werke der Literatur, welche als Pflichtlektüre gilt. Als Star Trek in den 1980ern an Größe und Popularität zunahm, mussten sich die Fans des Problems annehmen, wie man mit der weiter wachsenden Fülle an Episoden, Filmen, Büchern, Comics, technischen Dokumentationen, usw. umgehen sollte. __TOC__
- Due to this site being Battlefront Wiki, the only source is from the Battlefront Series and the Prima Official Game Guides. But the canon system are still intact due to how the series are released, main or spin-off series. The listings below are essential to formatting pages.
- Canon originally referred to (among other things) the recognised books of the Bible. In the 20th Century however the term has also been adopted in the discussion of most long-running media franchises to mean any event, character, or location within the fiction that is considered to have been "real" with respect to that fictional continuity. Only canonical material should be used as evidence in debates on the nature of the fictional universe and the characters that inhabit them.
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abstract | - Canon, in the context of a fictional universe, comprises those novels, stories, films, etc., that are considered to be genuine or officially sanctioned, and those events, characters, settings, etc., that are considered to have existence within the fictional universe. In order for a setting to appear cohesive, especially in fictions that contain multiple parts, both creators and audiences sometimes find it useful to define what has and has not "actually happened" in that universe. Material that is considered canon usually comes from the original source or author of the fictional universe, while (some) spin-offs and adaptations to other media are more likely to be non-canon and fan fiction is almost always non-canon. While David Eddings never issued a clear canon policy of his own, there are various contradictions between the main series books of The Belgariad and The Malloreon and the two "autobiographies" Belgarath the Sorcerer and Polgara the Sorceress. These differences might be explained by rationalizing that the later books are in character and based on those character's memories, but this is soley fan speculation.
- The Wiki's database includes an area for a single-letter (R, S, N or O) representing the level of canonicity of that element; these letters have since informally been applied to the levels of canon themselves: R-canon/C-Canon, S-canon, N-canon, and O-canon. As part of his work with the Wiki, Darth__Revan was responsible for the creation of this classification, and he spent the early stages developing and refining them into what they are today.
- Chercher "canon" sur dicod'Òc (dictionnaires en ligne sur le site du Congrès permanent de la lenga occitana)
- Kanon (written as Canon in the Del Rey and Kondansha Comics) (奏音 ?) is Ringo's Tuner and Kururu Sumeragi's cousin. He has an obsession for Ringo and seems to harbor romantic intentions, but some of his ambitions shatter when he openly plots to tamper with Ikki's A-T's. He presses on in his disregard for Tool Toul To's neutrality by actively battling against Kogarasumaru, though he at least seems to respect their leader. It is revealed that Ringo finally accepts him in order to defeat Genesis. However, he suddenly tells Ringo to tune it herself and opens his Guitar to attack Ringo, who asks Kanon what is the reason of his sudden attack, which suggests his betrayal. This is proven to be wrong in chapter 264, as it is revealed that his purpose for his attack is to lure Ringo outside of the Tropaion Tower. He is depressed himself, as he is unable to tune with Ringo. Kanon has recently joined the fight against Genesis along with Tool Toul To on Sora Takeuchi's carrier. Kanon is currently battling against Merlin using his guitar's sound blades to slash her before he is assaulted by a similar move. Kanon is next seen exclaiming how they were too late to save Rika and were playing right into Sora's hands.
- The A Song of Ice and Fire canon refers to materials either written by or approved by George R.R. Martin that are considered "official" for the history and events of the setting. The Song of Ice and Fire canon consists of works that fully canonical, semi-canonical (or canon until proven otherwise) and non-canon.
- The last Canon was encountered by SG-1 when they arrived on the planet via the Stargate. He branded SG-1 as demons due to them coming from the "Circle of Darkness" (the local's name for the Stargate), and attempted to sacrifice them, along with a girl named Mary, to a Goa'uld with a Unas (Demons) host sent by Sokar. Eventually, after Simon, a local villager sympathetic to SG-1, fatally shot the Unas with Teal'c's staff weapon, the Goa'uld took the Canon as its next host. However, this was discovered by Major Samantha Carter, and the Goa'uld-possessing the Canon was then shot. After the symbiote died first, the Canon regained control of his body and asked for forgiveness before dying. (SG1: "Demons")
- Canon is 'true Star Wars', while non-canon is not 'true Star Wars' and does not fit with the Star Wars storyline.
- Les canons sont utilisés pour tirer des projectiles, y compris des personnages. La plupart du temps, ils tirent des boulets de canon. Ils ont une apparence plus générique que celle des Bill Boum qui tirent spécifiquement des Bill Balles.
- Mentre Star Trek diventava sempre più popolare e le dimensioni del suo universo crescevano, negli anni '80, i fan si trovarono di fronte al problema di come trattare la crescente collezione di episodi, film, romanzi, fumetti, manuali tecnici e altro. Il canone di Star Trek è generalmente definito come tutta l'azione compresa nelle serie televisive e nei film prodotti dalla Paramount Pictures. Con il rilascio della Serie Animata su DVD, lo studio sembrò cambiare la propria fermezza, inserendo l'elenco della serie a cartoni (trasmessa in USA negli anni 1973–1974), come parte del canone prestabilito. [1] [2] [3] Le svariate referenze "ufficiali" (come la Star Trek Encyclopedia o la Star Trek Chronology) possono essere utilizzate come guide ma non come informazioni rigorosamente canoniche, in quanto non considerate strettamente canon in sé e a sé stanti. La definizione del canone di Star Trek, può variare tra i diversi appassionati, per questo motivo per fonti di riferimento come Memory Alpha, la questione diventa specialmente difficoltosa. In questi casi, il termine fanon (neologismo da fan canon -- portmanteau) è spesso utilizzato per riferirsi al "canone degli appassionati". Si applica essenzialmente a certi "eventi" che potrebbero essere accettati come veri da un gran numero di fan, e quindi anche rimpiazzare un "fatto" canonicamente stabilito nella mente di quegli appassionati, oppure riempire qualche "buco" narrativo.
- Canon is any information, facts, and/or statements that are part of the official history of a fictional franchise. Its opposite is fanon, fan-made history that is not endorsed or acknowledged by a series' creator. Canon is not limited to the information that appears in novels, anime or manga; it can also include data found profiles in official books and magazines, or comments from the creators during interviews. This article is a stub. You can help KanzakaDex by [ expanding it].
- The Wiki believes that Rowling's word is law. Any material she has written or was involved in or has stated is canon is the highest level of canon - even the illustrations, drawings, hand-lettering etc. that she created are part of that. The Wiki also considers the texts written in their original language, J.K. Rowling's British English and editions with corrections she approved are the most valuable. Any extra material she has provided for select editions or copies of the books as well as her own pronunciation, intonation, etc. are considered tier-one canon as well as thing she says in videos, interviews and audio recordings of her reading her writings or talking about their content also belong to this category. When J.K. Rowling contradicts herself, the newest source is to be taken as the "most" canon.
- Paramount Pictures and other "Powers That Be" have determined, for Star Trek, that all live-action series and feature films released by the copyright owner are canon. Some books, such as Star Trek Encyclopedia and Star Trek Chronology, are also seen as canon or having canon information until information "on-screen" contradicts them. Anything outside these categories, even if produced or sanctioned by Paramount, is not considered canon. The canon live-action series and movies are: Star Trek: The Original Series - Star Trek: The Animated Series - Star Trek: The Next Generation - Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Star Trek: Voyager - Star Trek: Enterprise - Star Trek films Star Trek fans have varying degrees of what they consider canon. Some believe some novels fall into canon, while others believe fan films can be considered canon. The term fanon, a play on the words "fan canon", encompasses this. Fanon can also describe fan fiction, fan films and other fan-created media.
- Categoría:Esbozos [[Archivo:Era-inf.png|thumb|Por definición, los Infinities son no-canon]] Star Wars canon fue definido por primera vez en el primer número de la revista de Lucasfilm, Star Wars Insider: El mundo de Star Wars no se limita a las películas. Cientos de novelas, cómics, videojuegos y otros productos relacionados con la saga han aumentado el universo limitado de las películas. A este mundo fuera de las películas se le llamó Universo Expandido. Tras la trilogía original comenzó a crecer el número de mundos, historias, biografías y relatos relacionados con Star Wars, hacia atrás y hacia adelante en la linea temporal. George Lucas, tras casi 20 años de silencio, comenzó a trabajar personalmente en las precuelas (episodios I, II, III) y completar así su saga. Debido a la gran cantidad de bibliografía existente ya sobre la historia de Star Wars, Lucas tuvo que rescatar algunos conceptos ya existentes en este universo expandido (como el nombre de la capital de la Antigua República, Coruscant) para mantener la coherencia. Sin embargo, esto no siempre ha sido posible, y material editado antes de las películas se convirtió en una piedra en el camino de la coherencia de la historia de Lucas. Se han establecido por tanto, una serie de prioridades (o fuentes, como si de un relato histórico se tratase) para clasificar el material de Star Wars y su fiabilidad en la historia: es el Canon (habitualmente clasificado como G,T,C,S o N). Así todo lo que aparezca en las películas es Canon G (George Lucas Canon) o de máxima fiabilidad, ya que la palabra de Lucas prima sobre cualquier material, incluso lo anteriormente mencionado por el propio Lucas: lo posterior solapa a lo anterior. El segundo nivel de Canon T (Television Canon)son las dos series de television Star Wars: The Clone Wars, así como la pelicula del mismo nombre y la serie que se esta realizando Live-Action. El siguiente canon C (Continuity Canon) es todo aquello que sale en el universo expandido y que complementa la historia de las películas. Parte de este material ha ascendido al nivel G incluso. En el tercer nivel o S (Secundary Canon) está todo aquel material que no entra en contradicción con la saga pero que no está probada con la suficiente fiabilidad su coherencia con la historia: pudo ocurrir o no. El último nivel es todo aquel material desfasado o de universos paralelos que no tienen que ver con la historia original y por lo tanto queda fuera de las actuales interpretaciones de la historia de Star Wars, es el nivel N o (Non Canon).
- Canon is "any material that is considered to be "genuine", or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator of a series". The canon of the Smallville television show is considered source material for this site, the Smallville wiki. This is a partial and emerging list of all material that is considered canon.
- Canon er simpelthen når noget gælder som værende "rigtigt". Der er 4 forskellige slags Canon:
* G-Canon er 'George Lucas-Canon'. G-canon er den øverste canon. Filmene hører herunder.
* C-Canon er bøger, tegneserier og tegnefilm.
* S-Canon er 'Sekundær Canon'. Officellie bøger og tegneserier der ikke 'passer' ind i kontinuiteten. mange af dem er fra 70'erne og 80'erne. Marvel tegneserierne hører herunder. Den indbefatter bla. Dark Empire serierne.
* N-Canon også kendt som Non-Canon er alt som ikke har noget med det "rigtige" Star Wars univers at gøre.
- Canon, in the context of a fictional universe, comprises those novels, stories, films, etc., that are considered to be genuine or officially sanctioned, and those events, characters, settings, etc., that are considered to have existence within the fictional universe. In order for a setting to appear cohesive, especially in fictions that contain multiple parts, both creators and audiences sometimes find it useful to define what has and has not "actually happened" in that universe. Material that is considered canon usually comes from the original source or author of the fictional universe, while (some) spin-offs and adaptations to other media are more likely to be non-canon and fan fiction is almost always non-canon.
- Canon is a debatable term when it comes to the Homeworld series, as the series has changed ownership several times and different companies and different personnel have worked on them. After the release of Homeworld 2 in 2003 it was arguable that there was no-one to determine what was canon in the Homeworld universe and what was not. The acquisition of the Homeworld intellectual property in 2013 by Gearbox Software and the development of both Homeworld Remastered and Homeworld: Shipbreakers has changed this situation again, with the Homeworld franchise now a going concern. However, the new owners of the franchise have not yet made definitive statements on what is canon and what is not.
- \'ka-nen\ (n.) — a sanctioned or accepted group or body of related works For other uses, see Canon (fiction). TRON canon is defined primarily by the movies, TRON and TRON: Legacy. These sources are further built on by events portrayed in TRON: Legacy's tie-ins in games and print media, although these additions are known to present deviations from events depicted in the movies.
- Canon, for the purposes of this wiki, refers to the live-action television episodes and motion pictures of the Star Trek franchise.
- Canon refers to all the information arising from the original, or officially sanctions, material. In Supernatural, in addition to the TV Show, canon covers material in the:
* Official Site
*
* Supernatural novels: Nevermore, Witch's Canyon among others. The notion of what comprises the canon is subjective, and both fans and the creators of a body of material will have differing opinions on the topic. On this Wiki, canon from sources other that the TV Show contains a superscript tag to indicate its source, so readers can ascribe their own hierarchy or value to the information.
- thumb|250pxCanon is de absolute waarheid van religie, literatuur en fictie. Ook de verhalen van Tolkien hebben een canon. Hoewel dat bij de verhalen van Tolkien eigenlijk voor iedereen anders is en sommige vinden dat er geen echte Canon is. Een reden hiervoor is dat er vele versies van verhalen zijn. Op bijvoorbeeld de Nederlandse wikipedia zeggen dat canon de Silmarillion, In de ban van de ring en de Hobbit is. Dus de eerste boeken die uit gegeven zijn. De Tolkien Gateway vind echter dat het de laatste versie van de auteur is. Dus ook delen van The History of Middle-Earth en Nagelaten Vertellingen worden dan tot de canon gerekend. De Silmarillion is ook grotendeels canoniek tenzij het in strijd is met latere verhalen.
- Canon is a pattern of established information concerning fiction. It establishes what stuff is real and what stuff is baloney. To say that a piece of information is non-canonical means that said information should not be held as trustworthy, especially if it conflicts established facts.
- For consistency, the following levels of canon can be accepted in the Dune wiki. 1.
* Original Dune novels by Frank Herbert. Absolute canon. 2.
* Expanded Dune, such as Legends of Dune, Prelude to Dune, Heroes of Dune, Sequels of Dune and all novels by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson. Official, but questionable, canon. 3.
* The Dune Encyclopedia. Although sanctioned by Frank Herbert himself, it is also Expanded Dune. It was recognized and admitted as non-canon by Willis E. McNelly himself in a relevant letter. 4.
* Dune movies, mini-series and video games are non-canon but official licensed products. Original concepts introduced by those works (for example House Ordos) can deserve individual articles but should always be noted as non-canon. Canon articles should contain alternative information from those sources, only in the Behind the scenes sections. Visual elements from the movies or the games can be used on the wiki for illustration purposes of proper canon articles. 5.
* Fanart can be accepted in the wiki in order to illustrate proper canon articles and themes, when official artwork is not available. 6.
* Unlicensed Fanfiction has no canonical significance at all and has no place in the wiki.
- Canon is contrasted with Fanon.
- The term "Canon" denotes the material accepted as "official". It is often contrasted with, or used as the basis for, works of fanfiction and other fanworks, which are not considered canonical. In the case of South Park, the canon consists of all episodes excluding "City on the Edge of Forever", due to being a dream, and "Pip", due to taking place in Victorian England. The canonicity of the original Spirit of Christmas shorts, and the episode "Terrance and Phillip in Not Without My Anus" is disputable. Matt and Trey have indicated upon the announcement of the game "South Park: The Fractured But Whole" that they consider the game "South Park: The Stick of Truth", canon to the series and the character Douhcebag may be referenced in future episodes. Canon Pairings are those that have been mentioned or shown in the official TV Program and associated film. For example, the pairing Stendy (Wendy Testaburger and Stan Marsh) is considered a canonical pairing.
- Canon refers to the "official" parts of a story. Here, it refers to facts (events, characters, locations etc.) that are considered to "officially" appear in the GTA universe.
- Canon is published by DC Comics under the CMX imprint. Current price per volume is $9.99.
- Jagex tries at every possible opportunity to keep to the established canon, but there is still dispute about certain subjects, especially on sketchy and highly-speculated subjects, such as the history of gods like Zaros and the Menaphite Pantheon.
- To understand canon and continuity, the overall Star Wars saga should be looked at as a set of stories written by many different people which "document" past "events." Although some stories are more reliable than others, they all are looked upon as part of the overall "history." It should also be remembered that all of these stories are simply that—stories. There are numerous errors that inevitably arise between the stories simply because different authors have their own ways of telling the story and may not have the time and resources to perfectly align the details. This site deals with non-canon material by putting red text notification above the non-canon items. The situation can be compared to Greek and Roman mythology, or the stories of King Arthur. The various Star Wars tales are a group of separate but linked stories, and are told by many different authors over a period of time. As of April 25, 2014, the only previously published materials that are considered canon are the six Star Wars films, the Star Wars: The Clone Wars television series and film, and the stand-alone Dark Horse Comics arc Star Wars: Darth Maul—Son of Dathomir. Meanwhile, the Expanded Universe is no longer considered canon and was re-termed as the "Legends" brand. Most Star Wars material released after April 25, 2014—with some exceptions—is composed in collaboration with the Lucasfilm Story Group, making it part of the "new canon."
- Star Wars: Exodus has uniquely shaped its own version of "canon" for Star Wars. While We do follow Star Wars canon up until our "breakaway" point in our uniquely crafted timeline, we do not strictly adhere to Star Wars canon after a certain point in time. Previously, this was after the events of Return of the Jedi in what we are now branding as our own Legends canon. Our new canon's "breakaway" point is two years prior to the events that occur in The Force Awakens. However, it should be noted that, as the new Star Wars canon develops, we will be adapting to it to as deemed appropriate to our own storytelling. For more information, please refer to our official rules for this new storyline. When we use "canon" on the Visual Encyclopedia, we are strictly referring to our own specific branded canon, within our Star Wars writing universe. All other canon articles are to be excluded from this Wikia, but may be referenced to in our articles.
- Canon originally referred to (among other things) the recognised books of the Bible. In the 20th Century however the term has also been adopted in the discussion of most long-running media franchises to mean any event, character, or location within the fiction that is considered to have been "real" with respect to that fictional continuity. Only canonical material should be used as evidence in debates on the nature of the fictional universe and the characters that inhabit them. In the Transformers brand, as a result of editorial choice and the multiversal nature of Transformers, canon is both extremely complicated and extremely simple, depending on how you look at it. The only reliable metric for determining the canonical status of Transformers fiction is whether it was officially licensed/approved or not. If so, it is canon... for some continuity. If not, it is not canon at all.
- Canon in Baldur's Gate universe usually revolves around the so-called canon party that travels with Gorion's Ward in-between the events of Baldur's Gate (game) (or Baldur's Gate: Siege of Dragonspear) and Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn. Sometimes canon can also refer to Forgotten Realms canon.
- The term Canon is generally used to refer to content, material, or information which is generally agreed to be authoritative and accurate. In fiction, Canon is often used to refer to the stories and elements of fictional worlds viewed as 'official' or 'approved.' In other words, Canon is the recognized, accepted and binding stories, backstory, plots, and elements that are seen as being 'accurate' or 'real' in the context of the fictional setting. Canon is most often seen as that content or information which is by and large seen as factual, established and set. It is also thus the content and information upon which all future development must hinge and respect. This is in contrast to less authoritative or unsubstantiated content, which is often referred to as apocryphal. Apocryphal content may be content unverified or substantiated within actual, canonical stories, or may be content not officially 'approved' by those who oversee the setting or world. In different fictional settings material which is canon often varies in definition. For the purposes of the Visionary Universe canon is any material which has:
* Been developed, produced and distributed under the auspices of Visionary Comics Studio
* Been developed and/or created under the guidelines of the Visionary Universe Wiki and approved
- Canon significa cualquier información que sea aceptada ampliamente y oficialmente como un hecho y la verdad por las autoridades preeminentes sobre el tema. Wikipedia tiene esto que decir: "Canon, en términos de un universo de ficción, es cualquier material que se considera que es" verdadero", o se puede referenciar directamente como material producido por el autor original o creador de una serie." En cuanto a Death Note, las autoridades son los creadores del manga: Tsugumi Ohba y Takeshi Obata.
- In the context of fiction, the canon of a fictional universe comprises those novels, stories, films, etc. that are considered to be genuine (or "official"), and those events, characters, settings, etc. that are considered to have inarguable existence within the universe. Usually items that are considered canon come from the original source of the universe while non-canon material comes from adaptations or unofficial items. Generally, Expanded Universes are considered canon to alternate reality designations of the character. These should be broken out into separate universe pages as denoted by the comic version of Albert Simmons being different from the HBO cartoon version of Albert Simmons (Todd McFarlane's Spawn). In layman's terms, one could basically say that something that is canon is something that "actually happened" in that universe. See Image Comics Database:Universe Structure for more information about universe designations.
- Canon, in terms of a fictional universe, is any material that is considered to be "genuine," or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator. For Forever Knight, canon refers collectively to those facts or ideas that were actually stated or seen in an of the television series, Forever Knight. Forever Knight canon includes:
* information in scenes in the Canadian version of the episodes, which was cut when they were shown in the United States. Forever Knight canon does not include:
* information in the series bible (unless it also appeared in an aired episode),
* anything cut from a script during production or post-production,
* comments made about authorial intention by any of the ,
* information in the original movie starring Rick Springfield (except in reference to the world of that movie),
* anything in the published tie-in novels,
* anything in .
- Considering the breadth of the Star Wars universe (including books, movies, toys, video games, etc) the issue of canon is an important one to Star Wars MUSH. In short, what should be considered official to the in character (IC) universe? Even excluding obvious sources that would be universally unpopular and a poor fit with the existing game (the Star Wars Christmas Special for example) there is still a great deal of possible reasonable lattitude in this area. Nonetheless, the MUSH administration have a very clear position on canon as it relates to theme. Star Wars MUSH places great importance on theme, so not all forms of roleplay are acceptable. While players should not feel constricted by theme, IC actions and attitudes should remain consistent to the Star Wars universe to help maintain our IC environment. Original material from the players helps keep our perspective of Star Wars fresh and unique. To prevent out-of-place subject matter (e.g., blatant ripoffs from other sci-fi themes, factions named after Los Angeles street gangs), RPA reserves the right to screen original factions, races, and technology and to ensure that characters have names appropriate to the MUSH's Star Wars theme. The following soruces are considered canon to Star Wars MUSH: - The original Star Wars movie trilogy (episodes IV-VI). - The Thrawn trilogy (begins with _Heir to the Empire_) by Timothy Zahn. - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game sourcebooks from West End Games that occur before the MUSH's timeline. The MUSH administration, especially RPA, reserves the right to be selective about what is and is not included from source books: publication does not necessarily indicate acceptance for MUSH theme! From SW1ki, a Wikia wiki.
- There are many inconsistencies and contradictions in . In order to present a consistent view of Enderverse events and history, a special interpretation of canon material has been created for use on the wiki.
- Canon are things that are accepted as being apart of the Star Wars story line.
- Canon is a term used to describe "official" material within a fictional work. Within the context of Bully, canon refers to what takes place or is described in the game itself.
- Canon refers to the characteristics of a particular book, movie, TV show, etc., that make up a plot continuum, as opposed to fanon. Canon can also mean the works themselves. For example, the Harry Potter canon, which is one of the simpler examples, is the seven novels and two shorter books by J.K. Rowling. Harry, Ron, Hermione, Snape, and the other characters in the books are called canon characters or sometimes just "canons." The issue of what is and isn't canon is sometimes quite complicated. For example, different books in a series can contradict each other, usually by accident. There are also works that are questionably canon, like interviews with authors. Movies that are based on books can also be a problem, because a lot of movieverse fanfiction may be written, and people have to decide if the movies make up their own canon. Things that are canon can even stop being canon. When things get really confusing, fans often postulate that there are several alternate continuities. For instance, the Marvel Universe (referred to as Universe 616) is generally accepted to be one canon – if Wolverine states in an issue of X-Men that he likes mint chocolate-chip ice cream, it will be taken as read that when he is missing in the next issue because he's gone to a Dairy Queen with the Runaways, he'll be buying mint chocolate-chip ice cream. However, Ultimate Marvel is considered a different continuity from Universe 616, so in Ultimate Marvel, Wolverine's favourite flavour of ice cream may be macadamia. This sort of justification is useful when a franchise has many different shows made by different people (e.g. Transformers). It is generally agreed that fanfiction and most fans opinions are not canon, although sometimes canon is influenced by popular fanon. For instance, in My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, a minor background character who was once accidentally rendered with crossed eyes was nicknamed Derpy Hooves by MLP fans and became popular in the fandom. In response, the show's creators eventually gave her a speaking role.
- Canon is a word used to describe a fixed collection of text. In Arthur Ransome Wiki, canon refers to the following: 1.
* Written works by Arthur Ransome 2.
* Information from Arthur Ransome, from interviews, notes, diaries as long as it does not contradict a higher source, unless it purports to be correcting a higher source (for example, the 1929-1930-1931 paradox) 3.
* Information from films, TV series etc based on Arthur Ransome works can be considered canon as long as it does not contradict a higher source On the opposite end of the spectrum from canon is might have been, which consists of information, stories and supposition that has been created by fans or scholars, but which are not actually addressed in any of the canonical sources listed above. Presenting supposition, conjecture or extrapolation as fact on Arthur Ransome Wiki would be considered as vandalism. 'Might have been' can be marked within an article by adding the tag "{{Might have been}}".
- Canon eli kaanoni on fillerin vastakohta. Sillä tarkoitetaan sisältöä, jota ei ole luotu Ne Pece -wikian artikkelin kirjoittamisen yhteydessä. Kaanoni on lähtöisin joko keskusteluista, piirroksista, mesetöherryksistä, dubbisarjasta, runoista tai vastaavista. Jotta jutusta tulee kaanonia, on siitä käytävä vähintään kahden keskeistä keskustelua. Vaikka artikkelin kirjoittamisen jälkeen jutusta tulisikin kaanonia, on tarpeettoman fillerin kirjoittaminen paheksuttavaa. Koska vuosien takaisia keskusteluja ja runoja on mahdotonta muistaa, on suotavaa, että sisältö kirjataan tai piirretään muistiin, kun juttu on vielä muokkaamattomana muistissa.
- Anyone who pays attention to canon will have their planet destroyed. That means you, too.
- Whenever an author writes a series, everything he or she wrote themselves is considered canon. To put it more simply, canon is the original material that was stated by the writer in their work.
- In terms of works of fiction or fictional universes, canon describes works that are considered more important or more "real" than others, i.e. "official" works. While the canonical status of non-television works set in the Buffyverse isn't always clear, the fictional universe's creator, Joss Whedon, has defined others as definitely canon.
- The Wikipedia:Wikipedia definition of the word Wikipedia:canon includes the following definition: In fiction, canon is the officially authorized interpretation of characters and events. It is also sometimes described as "part of a fictional universe which has inarguable validity within". In fandom, the term is often used to distinguish between "canonical" accounts (i.e. those authorized by the copyright holder) and those of fanfiction, sometimes called fanon. In serial fiction, new material can contradict earlier material (a practice known as retconning), in which case the new material becomes canon. Publishers, especially in mainstream comic books, sometimes release "what-if" stories featuring non-canonical interpretations of their characters. The canon for Sharpe's Wiki will always contain the works of Bernard Cornwell, or at least those which relate to the era of Richard Sharpe. It has been well recorded that there are continuity "differences" in the Sharpe books, caused by the continued extension of the Sharpe story. Where possible, these will be noted within Sharpe's Wiki
- Canon var en manlig människa och han var den religiösa ledaren för en människa samhälle vars civilisation var i nivå med medeltida Europa. Canons hade en ring kan kalla "gudomliga vreden" i form av blixtar. Denna ring, antas av SG-1 till Goa'uld teknologi, har traditionellt gått genom historien från en Canon till en annan. Den sista Canon påträffades av SG-1 när de kom på planeten via Stargate. Han brännmärkte SG-1 som demoner på grund av dem kommer från "Cirkel av Mörker", och försökte offra dem, tillsammans med en namngiven flicka Mary, till en Goa'uld med en Unas värd skickas med Sokar. Så småningom, efter Simon, en lokal bybo sympatiskt inställda till SG-1, dödligt sköt Unas med Teal'cs Ma'Tok stav tog Goa'uld Canon som nästa värd. Detta var dock upptäcktes av Major Samantha Carter, och Goa'uld-ägande Canon var än sköt och dödade både värd och symbioten. (SG1: "Demons") kategori:En-gång SG-1 karaktär kategori:Kristendomen kategori:Medeltids bybor kategori:Goa'uld värdar
- Canon is material officially considered part of the primary continuity. See also Wikipedia:Canon (fiction).
- Als Canon (oder auch Kanon) werden fundierte Fakten zu einem Werk oder einer Ansammlung von Werken bezeichnet. Auch die Star Trek Welt muss sich auf einen Canon einigen, da es bis heute unzählige Filme und Episoden und darüber hinaus Bücher, Spiele etc. gibt.
- Star Wars canon refers to the material related to the Star Wars universe that is officially considered to belong to the continuity, or storyline, of that universe. Because the Star Wars universe is a fictional one, elements of its continuity (i.e. historical events, character traits or actions, etc.) can change over time, having pieces added, removed, or overwritten. However, changing of the canon is generally discouraged. Lucas Licensing internally uses 5 levels of canonicty for their Holocron continuity database which keeps track of the elements of the universe. In this system, canon of the higher levels (e.g. the Star Wars films or television shows) are considered to be a more valid source than those of lower levels (e.g. comic books or novels) and when a discrepancy between two sources occurs, the higher level source is considered valid.
- The word Canon refers to the collection of stories, writings, and facts within a fictional universe which are considered true, or official material. This term comes from the Bible, and originally refers to the books included therein, excluding apocrypha (The books that were left out of the Bible and other works). It has since been applied to various science fiction and fantasy universes, as a way to distinguish events that "really happened" within their fictional universes from those that didn't. For example, Star Trek comic books are not considered canon to the TV series -- that is, events depicted in those comics didn't really happen in the Star Trek universe. Different franchises have different rules regarding what material counts as canon, and the Paper Computer Games franchise is no different. This article discusses the canon of the Paper Computer Game universe.
- To understand canon and continuity, the overall The Elder Scrolls series should be looked at as a set of stories written by many different people which "document" historical "events." Although some stories are more reliable than others, they all are looked upon as part of the overall "history." It should also be remembered that all of these stories are simply that—stories. There are numerous errors that inevitably arise between the stories simply because different authors have their own ways of telling the story and may not have the time and resources to perfectly align the details. The situation can be compared to Greek and Roman mythology, or the stories of King Arthur. The various Elder Scrolls tales are a group of separate but linked stories, and are told by many different authors over a period of time.
- Cada vez que un autor escribe una serie, todo lo que él o ella escribió por sí mismos se considera canónico. Para decirlo más simplemente, el canon es el material original que fue expuesto por el escritor en su trabajo.
- "Canon" means any information that is widely and officially accepted as fact and truth by preeminent authorities on the subject. Wikipedia has this to say: "Canon, in terms of a fictional universe, is any material that is considered to be "genuine", or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator of a series." In regards to Death Note, it's authorities are the manga's two creators: author Tsugumi Ohba and artist Takeshi Obata.
- The term Canon refers to the source material of a given series. In the Legend of Zelda series, as well as the rest of fiction, the term refers to anything which has been established as fact by official sources, most particularly the games themselves and their manuals. It is canonical fact, for example, that all first-born daughters born in the Royal Family of Hyrule are to be named Zelda; this was established in the backstory for Zelda II: The Adventure of Link. Some things which go against canon are regarded as non-canon, because they are not established as fact. For example it is non-canon that Link fought Mario as seen in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. The term fanon refers to any information regarding the series created by fans, unincluded in official mediums, and is considered non-canon. Certain statements are regarded as canon by some players, but not by others. For instance, in an interview, Shigeru Miyamoto stated that The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time comes before any of the other games chronologically. Because this has not been formally established within the games themselves, however, some players view this "fact" with a jaundiced eye. The Legend of Zelda series is perhaps unique in that its canon has been known, at times, to contradict itself; for example, the map of Hyrule has been known to change from one game to another. This makes it difficult, if not outright impossible, for some facts to be concretely established in a manner that satisfies everyone. Spin-off games such as Link's Crossbow Training, Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland, Color Changing Tingle's Love Balloon Trip are generally considered non-canon because they are strictly separate from the main series. Many fans regard the CD-i series of Zelda games, Link: The Faces of Evil, Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon, and Zelda's Adventure as non-canon due to them being developed by Phillips and the fact that Nintendo rarely acknowledges the games' existence, even practically erasing them from history in a statement connected to The Legend of Zelda: Collector's Edition. The Hyrule Warriors series was officially confirmed Eiji Aonuma to take place in a different dimension from the main series, so the events within the Hyrule Warriors series are considered non-canon to the main series, as it exists in its own separate universe. Other The Legend of Zelda media such as books, comic/manga, and animated series are also generally considered non-canon to the main series, even if they are based on and/or are an adaption of canon sources, for example The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (manga).
- Canon is another word for official. The primary use of the term is to distinguish official settings and stories from individual troupes' chronicles and other fan-made fiction and resources. The secondary use of the term is to establish the official facts of a fictional setting (and, sometimes, to retroactively alter those facts in a retcon). Generally speaking, when the term "canon" is used on this wiki, the use of both definitions is implied. The White Wolf canon is generally defined as all official game books released by White Wolf Publishing. The various "official" references (such as the novels) may be used as a guide to canon information, but are not necessarily canon in and of themselves. The Kindred: The Embraced TV series and the various White Wolf collectible card games and video games are not strictly considered canon (although the relevant material is still considered appropriate for posting on this Wiki). Fan works are, by definition, not canonical, although ideas and terms from the fan community are often accepted as an unoffical part of the canon by the fan community; these ideas are dubbed "fanon" (from "fan canon"). Game books produced under license from Onyx Path Publishing are currently considered to be canonical, and the new licensed LARP material from By Night Studios is based off of the Classic World of Darkness setting but diverges into its own canon, although either or both of these relationships with canon may change in the future as White Wolf (under the management of Paradox Interactive) resumes the development of World of Darkness material in-house. The definition of White Wolf canon may vary for different fans, and therefore for a reference source like the WWWiki, the question may become especially difficult.
- Canon is een begrip dat omschreven wordt als de officiële of vaak geaccepteerde richtlijn in de wereld van fictie en fantasy. Ook op Duckstad Wiki, en ook vaak op internetfora, wordt een canon gehanteerd. We onderscheiden drie lagen canonniteit waarin je elk verhaal of elke informatie in kan plaatsen.
- Canon, in the context of a fictional universe, comprises those novels, stories, films, etc., that are considered to be genuine or officially sanctioned, and those events, characters, settings, etc., that are considered to have existence within the fictional universe. In order for a setting to appear coherent, especially in fictions that contain multiple parts, both creators and audiences sometimes find it useful to define what has and has not "actually happened" in that universe. Material that is considered canon usually comes from the original source or author of the fictional universe, while (some) spin-offs and adaptations to other media are more likely to be non-canon and fanfiction is always non-canon, due to it not being published and released by anyone associated with the Warriors franchise.
- Canon is not defined in the Matrix franchise. The three films, The Matrix, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions form the main core of the series, with additional short animated films, video games and comics created by the Wachowskis and other artists. Some of these tie directly into the films, while others are more ambiguous.
- A mesure que Star Trek s'est développé, les fans se sont retrouvés face au problème de comment traiter la masse d'informations sans cesse grandissante issue des épisodes, films, romans, comics, manuels techniques, jeux vidéos, etc. La position officielle de Paramount Pictures est de considérer que les évènements, personnages, lieux... qui ont été définis dans les épisodes et films sont canons. Ceux qui sont définis dans les romans, dans les comics, ou dans les jeux, etc... ne le sont pas. Durant un certain temps les seules exceptions à cette position étaient les romans VOY "Mosaic" & VOY: "Pathway" écrits par la productrice Jery Taylor qui détaillent le background des personnages principaux de Voyager, cependant les scénaristes les ayant négligés par la suite, certains faits sont devenus caduques, si bien que comme les autres romans la canonicité de ces romans n'existe pas. Les divers ouvrages de références "officielles" (comme "Star Trek Encyclopedia" ou "Star Trek Chronology") ne peuvent donc être utilisés que comme guide, car ils ne sont pas considérés canons eux-mêmes.
- Canon is a word used to describe a fixed collection of text. In Tintin Wiki, canon refers to the following: 1.
* Latest of published Works by Herge 2.
* Information from earlier published works by Herge if not contradicted by later works 3.
* Information from Herge, from interviews, notes, diaries as long as it does not contradict a higher source, unless it is correcting a higher source 4.
* Information from films, TV series etc based on Herge's works, made with the permission of Herge or his agents or executors can be considered canon as long as it does not contradict a higher source Overall guideline (from Wiki Guidelines "Though this wiki is for all Tintin media, the comics take priority. While information can be added about movies, television and video games, information about the comics always comes first." On the opposite end of the spectrum from canon is fan fiction, which consists of information, stories and supposition that has been created by fans but which are not actually addressed in any of the canonical sources listed above. Presenting supposition, conjecture or extrapolation as fact on Tintin Wiki would be considered as vandalism. Conjecture can be marked within an article by adding the tag "{{conjecture}}".
- Note well: the canon as defined here is currently incomplete, is probably inconsistent, and would seem inherently resistant to the admission of both completeness and consistency.
- There are four major classifications for canon when it comes to Vilous and it's related species and characters.
- Le canon est une arme à feu tubulaire de grande taille destinée à lancer des boulets, ou des nains à très grande distance, dans le but de faire exploser des trucs comme des châteaux forts, des châteaux de cartes ou les vertèbres du nain qu'on avait mis dans le canon. L'usage du canon est quelque peu tombé en désuétude de nos jours, ce qui explique en très grande partie la recrudescence des boulets, et des nains. Et qui dit recrudescence, dit hausse des prix à la pompe. C'est donc dans un but plus déflationniste que déflagrationniste que nous allons coiffer le canon au peigne fin, exposer ses objectifs plutôt que de les exploser, et continuer à nous moquer des nains, qui en plus d'être d'excellentes chairs à canons, sont petits et personnellement, me font assez peur.
- Canon is a fan-based idea that exists in a unique way within Doctor Who fandom. In theory, it means a body of work that an established body of literature that can draw upon, but it is more commonly thought as what a fan considers what forms part of the Doctor Who universe, or what "really happened". This is often a personal choice, one which is endlessly discussed and argued about in just about every Doctor Who-related forum or message board that has existed on the internet. Unlike the Star Trek and Star Wars universes, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has never made a pronouncement about what is or is not canon for Doctor Who. In August 2010 however, the BBC did make a fleeting reference to canon, in relation to their Doctor Who: The Adventure Games, stating in their press release that "Players will encounter new and original monsters, in stories which form part of the overall Doctor Who canon". A large issue when attempting to construct a definition of canon for Doctor Who is that it is never finished; Doctor Who has been in more or less constant production in one way or another since 1963, what with TV stories, novelisations, novels, radio dramas, audio stories, toys, comic stories and so much more. Some fans want a complete narrative, but Doctor Who can never be complete.
- As a result of Jane’s tip, the police bring Ella in for questioning about Sydney’s murder. Ella naturally downplays the tension between her and Sydney prior to the murder. Meanwhile, Lauren is torn between going on a shopping date with Riley for her wedding and impressing her new boss Wendi who just set her up on a "date." A stunned Jonah is accused of stealing a diamond necklace from a mansion he videotaped for a realtor, but becomes even more upset after Ella mentions a similar necklace that she saw in David’s apartment. Elsewhere, Violet maliciously sabotages another employee at Coal so she can get closer to Auggie.
- Canon, based in Japan, is one of the largest camera and lens manufacturers. Its lineup includes advanced SLRs as well as point-and-shoots. Unlike its chief rival Nikon, Canon also sells printers, copiers and such office machines besides cameras. It all began in 1933 in a small laboratory in the Tokyo area. The majority of of high quality cameras at the time were coming from Germany. The first prototype developed was named Kwanon. In the year of 1935, Japan's first camera, Hansa Canon, was born. It was the first 35mm focal-place-shutter camera. In 1957 Canon made its first step into the global market with opening a U.S office in New York City. Within the next couple years Canon kept reinventing itself to become more of what the people wanted. Better quality, built, and simplicity. By 1970, Canon grew to 44.8 billion yen in sales and more than 5,000 employees. Besides what seemed to be Canon at its best in time, Canon did fall back. In the first six months of 1975, it failed to pay a dividend for the first time since becoming a public company. However, after a couple years of Canon working hard on reaching sales, making new an better quality, and gaining more employees, Canon began to recover. The first Digital SLR Canon camera was introduced in the year of 1976. It truly changed the face of photography and began a new start of photographic direction. It has been decades since the beginning of the Canon SLR camera and still every year Canon keeps to continue the growth of new, durable, and amazing quality cameras. Canon is one of the most recommend cameras by professional photographers to even a beginning photographer. Canon cameras will continue to produce amazing quality as well as keep customers happy. (Contributed by AndreaB April 5, 2011)
- Canon: Canon means what the author/editor/creators/writers determines what is consider as part of the continuity of their story and a direct opposite of Non-Canon or Filler sometimes editors determine whats canon other times its up to the team of people who help create it and whats Canon.
- Canon (nom non-officiel) est un sort de Picto Magie, exclusif à l'anime.
- Canon is a term used to describe anything that can be used as a source of information when writing an article on a wiki. It is used by a great number of wikis to mean a great number of things; sometimes it describes books, sometimes films, websites, video games, images, comments made in passing by the author or even other articles. On the Potter Dictionary Wiki, however, the term canon denotes the ten Harry Potter books:
* Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
* Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
* Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
* Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
* Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
* Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
* Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
* Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
* Quidditch Through the Ages
* The Tales of Beedle the Bard
- Canon is what we in the Templars of Twilight consider to be true to our "Templarverse". Our canon attempts to remain within the realms and boundaries of current canon. Either avoiding direct interaction with canon, or working within it in a manner that would allow it to not interfere. And example of this would be when the Templars acted as 'nameless' pilots of Sekotan fighters over Coruscant.
- The highest level of canon is the original Kinnikuman manga by Yudetamago, published in Weekly Shonen Jump. This shows the original story by the creator's themselves. It's because of this that all information found in the manga is canon unless stated otherwise. It should be noted that, since it was originally a gag manga, there are contradictions early on. There are other examples later on in the manga, such as the absence of Terryman's prosthetic leg, which had plagued him during the American Tour Arc. Another example is that in the Seven Akuma Choujin Arc, characters such as Puri-Puri Man, Mister American, and others were present only to be switched with The Mountain, SteCase King, and Mister Khamen. For these, only assumptions can be made at best.
- Canon refers to a group of works considered to be central, vital, and legitimate in some field. One of its more common uses is in describing which books are considered valid parts of the Bible, with various Christian denominations using slightly different lists. In broader use, one sees applications such as "fan fiction is not considered canonical in the lore of Star Trek".
- Here the 'canon' of the MUSH is detailed, the reference of what material available outside the game is considered to be IC or 'a part of' the galaxy of the MUSH.
- Canon is the material accepted as officially part of the story in an individual universe of that story. Events and Characters who are considered canon are likely to have an effect on the overall continuity of the Universe. For D.Gray-man is considered canon the material which is produced by the Author Hoshino Katsura.
- From Wikipedia: While every single player-made character could be considered non-canon, the characters are what we would like to consider "Community-Canon," making them canonical in the Warcraft community. Non-canon would then, in turn, be considered non-community-canon.
- Canon has a primary listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the TOPIX index. It has a secondary listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
- Canon manufactures a line of camcorders that range from inexpensive MiniDV camcorders to professional camcorders.
- Canon is alle informatie die officieel wordt gerekend als een deel van het Star Wars universum. In 2014 werd het canon opnieuw gestart. De films, Star Wars: The Clone Wars en Star Wars: Rebels behoorden tot het canon, maar ook alle comics, boeken, kortverhalen en games die vanaf de zomer van 2014 zijn verschijnen.
- Due to this site being Battlefront Wiki, the only source is from the Battlefront Series and the Prima Official Game Guides. But the canon system are still intact due to how the series are released, main or spin-off series. The listings below are essential to formatting pages. When formatting a page, the High Canon content are essentially needed first, unless the source comes from a Low Canon. When taking example of a weaponary or a class of a starship, the first information need to go from the source from the High Canon, due to thier position as the Main Series of Battlefront. When the main series contradict each other, the information is taken from the second on the listing of the High Canon: Star Wars: Battlefront II. Nonetheless, the original Battlefront needs to be in the article, but the sequal is required to be a primary source. This is because the later released date of the Battlefront II and having the information given from the Star Wars Canon that was not present during the making of the first Battlefront.
- El canon es una remuneración compensatoria cobrada por la SGAE por las supuestas perdidas que ocasiona la piratéria.Afecta a todo aparato que sea capaz de guardar sonido,imprimir e incluso los vehículos de transmision de datos(ADSL).Con lo cual se puede chupar mucho dinero sin trabajar a costa del resto de trabajadores españoles explotados en sus empresas por 1000 euros.O sea,un robo
- Canon is a term used to designate what is considered "official" in a certain fictional universe. With few possible exceptions only canon material is featured in the character pages. Non-canon material doesn't count - it never happened. The generally agreed-upon definition is that the work by the original author and creator of the fictional setting is canon, unless the author or the copyright holder declares otherwise. Few other exceptions are also possible and should be noted on the verse page. The primary canon is the source material first released (with few possible exceptions), with the other author works being secondary canon. When different source materials give different versions of the same feat, and by that they contradict each other in the depiction of the feat, the primary canon takes precedence over the secondary canon. If the feat is correctly depicted over multiple canons any of these can be used to judge the feat. Should by judging the feat through multiple canons different results be reached the result of the primary canon will have priority. So for most manga series, that means the original manga is canon, while the anime is not (since the anime is simply an adaptation of the manga made by others). Databooks are considered secondary canon since scans tend to contradict them. It should be noted that this is often evaluated on a case - by - case basis. In addition a tertiary canon will be allowed. The tertiary canon consists of official adaptations not overseen by the author, which do not modify or contradict source material. When other source materials give different versions of the same feat, and by that contradict the tertiary canon in the depiction of the feat, the others take precedence. And here as well, if the feat is correctly depicted over multiple canons any of these can be used to judge the feat. Should by judging the feat through primary or secondary canon a different result be reached than for tertiary canon the result of primary or secondary canon will have priority.
* Entirely new feats of tertiary canon, like for example new abilities, should be disregarded. Details added to existing fight scenes, such as damage caused to the surroundings, can be accepted for text based media like books.
* Any changes based on tertiary canon will only be accepted if they are not contradicted by any instances of another canon, with regards to either the character power-scale, or logical inconsistencies (and plot holes).
* All of the rules that are written in the Cinematic Time page still apply when it comes to evaluation of such tertiary canon feats.
- [[Archivo:Jo_rowling.jpg|thumb|J. K. Rowling. Autora de Harry Potter. la Información que procede de ella es considerada la mayor fuente de canon en la Harry Potter Wiki.]] Canon es una palabra usada para describir una colección específica de textos relacionados a una temática o serie determinada.
- Der Begriff Canon (\'ka-nen\ (n.)) ist eine definierte Ansammlung von Inhalten, die besondere Anerkennung genießen. Dieser Begriff stammt von „Kanon“ ab – eine Sammlung bedeutender, als gut anerkannter Werke der Literatur, welche als Pflichtlektüre gilt. Als Star Trek in den 1980ern an Größe und Popularität zunahm, mussten sich die Fans des Problems annehmen, wie man mit der weiter wachsenden Fülle an Episoden, Filmen, Büchern, Comics, technischen Dokumentationen, usw. umgehen sollte. Obwohl die Vorstellung eines Kanons im Star-Trek-Fandom sehr etabliert ist, kommt es auch immer wieder dazu, dass sich Geschichten verschiedener Autoren in Details widersprechen. Das geschieht teilweise absichtlich, um zum Beispiel eine Geschichte interessanter zu gestalten, oder aus Unkenntnis früherer Geschichten. __TOC__
- En Dragon Ball Z existen ciertos rellenos que fueron ideas del propio Akira Toriyama. El ejemplo más notorio son los episodios donde aparece Launch dado que Toriyama explicó que la historia de Launch y Ten Shin Han no podía ser contada en el manga pero sí podía profundizarse en el anime. Otro relleno pensado por él sería cuando Goku desprende un trozo de nube para comer pues Toriyama dijo "Goku no cruzaría un millón de kilómetros sin comer algo".
- Canon : In fiction, canon is the material accepted as officially part of the story in an individual universe of that story. Unfortunately later works in the same fictional 'universe' can directly contradict earlier 'Canon' (particularly when part of primary narrations, instead of mentions in dialog/thoughts of characters which might potentially be interpretation/opinion and NOT fact). This can lead to questions of that new material Who authoritatively is allowed this acceptance is also a matter of opinion (as in the case of sloppy later works by the same author). Contradictions might be resolved by further explanation, or when being fundamental 'facts', simply cannot be explained. . . .
- Canon comes from the religious language, referring to the books and writings that make up authentic Scripture. In fiction and games, it refers to the elements of the fictional universe which are presumed to be true by other media referring to the same world. Sometimes items can become non-canon, pseudo-canon, or alternate canon, depending on the editorial direction taken by the series.
- Canon is official, endorsed work by the creator / author of a piece of work (such as a video game, a book, a movie, etc.)
- Considering the breadth of the Star Wars universe (including books, movies, toys, video games, etc) the issue of canon is an important one to Star Wars MUSH. In short, what should be considered official to the in character (IC) universe? Even excluding obvious sources that would be universally unpopular and a poor fit with the existing game (the Star Wars Christmas Special for example) there is still a great deal of possible reasonable lattitude in this area. Nonetheless, the MUSH administration have a very clear position on canon as it relates to theme. Star Wars MUSH places great importance on theme, so not all forms of roleplay are acceptable. While players should not feel constricted by theme, IC actions and attitudes should remain consistent to the Star Wars universe to help maintain our IC environment. Original material from the players helps keep our perspective of Star Wars fresh and unique. To prevent out-of-place subject matter (e.g., blatant ripoffs from other sci-fi themes, factions named after Los Angeles street gangs), RPA reserves the right to screen original factions, races, and technology and to ensure that characters have names appropriate to the MUSH's Star Wars theme. The following soruces are considered canon to Star Wars MUSH: - The original Star Wars movie trilogy (episodes IV-VI). - The Thrawn trilogy (begins with _Heir to the Empire_) by Timothy Zahn. - The Star Wars Roleplaying Game sourcebooks from West End Games that occur before the MUSH's timeline. The MUSH administration, especially RPA, reserves the right to be selective about what is and is not included from source books: publication does not necessarily indicate acceptance for MUSH theme!
- Canon is the body of fiction that we consider to have actually happened on the Transformers Universe MUX. Overall, on the MUX we consider the 80s Transformers cartoon and the 80s Marvel G.I. Joe comic series to be canon. We occasionally bring in elements from other sources (for example, the Transformers comic and the G.I. Joe cartoon), but if there's any conflict, the primary canon is the definitive source.
- The "authenticity" of information. Canon describes whether or not something is imperically verified in game. The only true canon source is the game itself.
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