Birdwatch Archive

Birdwatch Note Rating

2024-08-16 18:53:31 UTC - HELPFUL

Rated by Participant: 19E667D4EBCA0818C5242591F3188C758AD3B9408B7764239D63A77F6838A99E
Participant Details

Original Note:

This claim is false. The earliest known use of the phrase “good morning” can be traced back to the Middle English period (1150-1500 AD) and is literally just a combination of the words “good” and “morning”. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/good-morning_int?tab=factsheet&tl=true

All Note Details

Original Tweet

All Information

  • noteId - 1824456542696984900
  • participantId -
  • raterParticipantId - 19E667D4EBCA0818C5242591F3188C758AD3B9408B7764239D63A77F6838A99E
  • createdAtMillis - 1723834411793
  • version - 2
  • agree - 0
  • disagree - 0
  • helpful - 0
  • notHelpful - 0
  • helpfulnessLevel - HELPFUL
  • helpfulOther - 0
  • helpfulInformative - 0
  • helpfulClear - 1
  • helpfulEmpathetic - 0
  • helpfulGoodSources - 1
  • helpfulUniqueContext - 0
  • helpfulAddressesClaim - 1
  • helpfulImportantContext - 1
  • helpfulUnbiasedLanguage - 1
  • notHelpfulOther - 0
  • notHelpfulIncorrect - 0
  • notHelpfulSourcesMissingOrUnreliable - 0
  • notHelpfulOpinionSpeculationOrBias - 0
  • notHelpfulMissingKeyPoints - 0
  • notHelpfulOutdated - 0
  • notHelpfulHardToUnderstand - 0
  • notHelpfulArgumentativeOrBiased - 0
  • notHelpfulOffTopic - 0
  • notHelpfulSpamHarassmentOrAbuse - 0
  • notHelpfulIrrelevantSources - 0
  • notHelpfulOpinionSpeculation - 0
  • notHelpfulNoteNotNeeded - 0
  • ratingsId - 182445654269698490019E667D4EBCA0818C5242591F3188C758AD3B9408B7764239D63A77F6838A99E