changeset 73946:fc54af724e3c

Fix typos.
author Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
date Sun, 12 Nov 2006 19:59:52 +0000
parents 014379fe3697
children f5b99da95474
files man/glossary.texi
diffstat 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- 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