# HG changeset patch # User Richard M. Stallman # Date 1163361592 0 # Node ID fc54af724e3cb93cf03145ab4d7d804195a23fa9 # Parent 014379fe36978b1e1a731785b46764c70724e724 Fix typos. diff -r 014379fe3697 -r fc54af724e3c man/glossary.texi --- a/man/glossary.texi Sun Nov 12 19:57:40 2006 +0000 +++ b/man/glossary.texi Sun Nov 12 19:59:52 2006 +0000 @@ -453,7 +453,7 @@ 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 @@ @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