"No, it is a word. What matters is the connection that word implies."
A TV Tropes ruling established mid-2011 that no new articles in the YKTTW should be named after a Stock Phrase or line of personal (in-character) dialogue. Bone up on history here.— Ramachandra in The Matrix Revolutions, justifying an AI's use of the word "love"
- The big one: They do not work. That is, they don't get adopted as the name of a trope. They get no inbound links.
- We don't want our editors thinking that the trope is about characters merely saying the phrase. Having a "list of times characters said X" is about as meaningful as, say, a "list of times characters sat on chairs". The trope is established by the surrounding context, the actual phrase or dialogue which occurred is merely incidental and thus Not a Trope. The reason the author wrote the line, the thing he or she wanted to accomplish to advance the story being told, that's the trope.
- Many older Stock Phrase articles were at some point written as "A common phrase said when...", placing emphasis on the exact words used instead of the actual trope that prompted them. This is bad trope formatting, and one of the reasons it even became a problem at all.
- We don't want every example section getting formatted like a list of quotations. All those quotations give the impression that it's about the exact words used at the expense of the real trope surrounding them. There's generally no need to quote the source material verbatim, and the example sections just look better when they aren't broken up every five lines with a distracting block of quotation markup. It can be worthwhile to quote the dialogue that occurred in one or two examples here and there, but only in addition to a properly formatted citation, not in lieu of one.
- Sometimes a Stock Phrase ... just isn't a stock phrase. If it could occur for a variety of unrelated reasons, then we can't pick just one to use for the trope — the phrase is too broad, and will get misused when editors only see the name. Doubly so if combined with the list-of-quotations issue described above. This is the same reason we don't like naming tropes after characters anymore, because characters of fiction are remembered for too many different reasons to pick just "that one".
- Some Stock Phrase-named tropes become Pothole Magnets (or worse, Troper Tics) where editors link the name every time they use the phrase, regardless of whether they're actually providing an example of the trope, or not. (And in most cases, it's not.)
- It uses a personal pronoun like "I", "me", "we", "us", "my", or "our" as if someone were referring to themselves.
- Line of dialog: I Am The Best, Its All Up To Me, We Are Going To Lunch, Thats My Sandwich
- O.K.: There Is No I In Team
- O.K.: The Our X Are Different names are not stock phrases, as they do not sound like dialog, and the "our" is not for characters in the work.
- Specific exceptions: Two Words: I Can't Count (moderator approved)
- It uses the words "you", "your" or "yourself" as if they're directed toward someone else.
- Line of dialog: You Need To Leave, Thats Your Problem, Get Over Yourself
- O.K.: Sensing You Are Outmatched ("you" refers to the speaker, not another), You Turn (pun on U-turn)
- Specific exceptions: Stop Hitting Yourself (moderator approved)
- It uses the words "his", "hers", "they", "them", "their" or "theirs" to refer to a character or characters.
- Line of dialog: Lets His Powers Do The Fighting, Here They Come, Thats Up To Them, Its Theirs, Its All Their Fault
- It's in the form of a full sentence and sounds like a statement directed toward another person.
- Giving an order, e.g. Get Out Of The House or Edit It Out.
- In the form of a question, e.g. What Year Is It?
- General: Hello There, No Phones Tonight (by word of
Fast Eddie), Somebody Do Something, Welcome To The Masquerade