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authorRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>2006-11-12 19:59:52 +0000
committerRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>2006-11-12 19:59:52 +0000
commit06ddca4d3862b256cca2572b9e20c1804103d74b (patch)
treee6d6f8602cacf326bb4eea171b55e8688141e8e9
parentf2b0f1f3fe9880bfa32de317f310d161c0138f6d (diff)
downloademacs-06ddca4d3862b256cca2572b9e20c1804103d74b.tar.gz
Fix typos.
-rw-r--r--man/glossary.texi6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/man/glossary.texi b/man/glossary.texi
index 0e0fd1b38f6..02611790bee 100644
--- a/man/glossary.texi
+++ b/man/glossary.texi
@@ -453,7 +453,7 @@ or absolute; the meaning of a relative file name depends on the current
directory, but an absolute file name refers to the same file regardless
of which directory is current. On GNU and Unix systems, an absolute
file name starts with a slash (the root directory) or with @samp{~/} or
-@samp{~@var{user}/} (a home directory). On MS-Windows/MS-DOS, and
+@samp{~@var{user}/} (a home directory). On MS-Windows/MS-DOS, an
absolute file name can also start with a drive letter and a colon
@samp{@var{d}:}.
@@ -848,8 +848,8 @@ has never been saved). @xref{Saving}.
@item Moving Text
Moving text means erasing it from one place and inserting it in
-another. The usual way to move text by killing (q.v.@:) and then
-yanking (q.v.@:). @xref{Killing}.
+another. The usual way to move text is by killing (q.v.@:) it and then
+yanking (q.v.@:) it. @xref{Killing}.
@item MULE
MULE refers to the Emacs features for editing multilingual non-@acronym{ASCII} text