• has 82 questions, and is a synonym to it.

    Wiki excerpt:

    Users with sufficient reputation can flag posts that have quality problems which they are unable to address themselves, thereby bringing them to the attention of the site's moderators.

  • has 570 questions, and is a synonym to it.

    Wiki excerpt:

    Flagging is the process of bringing a post to a community moderator's attention for any reason.

I don't see an obvious difference in meaning between these tags. Is one supposed to refer to flags themselves, while the other refers to the act of flagging? Is that really a difference that needs to be made distinct?

If there is no meaningful difference, I suggest we merge them all into the most popular tag ().

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2 Answers

I think you nailed it: and (nouns) denote questions about handling flags, whereas and (verbs) denote questions about emitting them.

Since these two operations are not the same at all (how to act on flags versus how to flag), and do not concern the same audience, I don't think it would be a good idea to merge their respective tags.

However, maybe we can clarify their differences by aliasing and to a new tag, and merging into . This way, we would end up with two complementary verb-based tags that might convey the question's topic better.

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There is a subtle difference between flags, and flagging (considered as English words), but I don't think that we should make a difference between questions about the flags (e.g. when an answer should be flagged as "not an answer"), and questions about the flagging process. For those questions, it is sufficient to use a single tag.

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