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A. nearly - the styles, page settings, and particle defaults will be inherited by other outlines (unless they specifically have overrides to prevent this). The "layout" is a different matter that is not inherited by any other outline automatically - the other outline has to be told to specifically inherit from the base outline if this is what you want to happen. But the general statement that you made is broadly correct.
B. No. Any outline can have particles on the layout. The "home - particles" layout is the one used by the standalone template that only has particles on the layout (no module positions and no modules). This is one way of building a whole page by just putting content directly onto the layout. But, if you want to use modules and modules positions as you did in Gantry 4 then you could used the "home - positions" layout which generally just has module position particles on the layout (plugs logo and menu and footer) then you can use that one outline for several pages and just assign different modules to those positions. "home - particles" should not be the "default" template since it has page specific content on the outline layout. It is the "default" outline that should be marked as the "default".
C. The "default" outline should be the default template in template manager and this will be the outline that all your pages use unless another outline is specifically assigned.
2. You should have cloned because otherwise any changes made in the originals will be reflected in your copy because they are "inheriting" from the originals.
3. No. If you start putting particles directly on the layout of the outlines then you are making them page specific - which in turn will mean you need more outlines (one per page taking it to it's logical conclusion). The other extreme would be to have a single outline that only contained "module position" particles on the layout and then you could just assign modules to those positions (just like you always did with Gantry 4). In reality, you will end up with a few outlines as some page will have a different structure (the same as you had OVERRIDE template in Gantry 4).
To reiterate, if you just want to use modules and module positions then you can, but you'll be missing out on a lot of great Gantry 5 features and functionality if you take that approach (but you can if you want to). Also, I should add that you can put particles into a "Gantry 5 particle" module (think of it as a wrapper) which means that you can treat particles just like modules too and assign them to module positions on your layout.
This has been a very long answer to a very long question. It would be better if you could raise one topic for each distinct question going forward please.
Regards, Mark.
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