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authorphantom <phantom@FreeBSD.org>2000-01-07 13:20:55 +0000
committerphantom <phantom@FreeBSD.org>2000-01-07 13:20:55 +0000
commitf370c550532a4e906a3c272fcd35b43f5cbce2e4 (patch)
treee40ba0efb0471fbb4d35e48c4d577d0f865baa63 /share/man/man7
parent4f173ccba9dfc5e92e38af3c1cebb149fefd1fe6 (diff)
downloadFreeBSD-src-f370c550532a4e906a3c272fcd35b43f5cbce2e4.zip
FreeBSD-src-f370c550532a4e906a3c272fcd35b43f5cbce2e4.tar.gz
Fix typos.
PR: docs/15781 Submitted by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.rhein-neckar.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'share/man/man7')
-rw-r--r--share/man/man7/mdoc.samples.716
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/share/man/man7/mdoc.samples.7 b/share/man/man7/mdoc.samples.7
index 3449d3e..869f039 100644
--- a/share/man/man7/mdoc.samples.7
+++ b/share/man/man7/mdoc.samples.7
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ page layout macros
make up the
.Em "page structure domain"
which consists of macros for titles, section headers, displays
-and lists. Essentially items which affect the physical position
+and lists. Essentially items which affect the physical position
of text on a formatted page.
In addition to the page structure domain, there are two more domains,
the manual domain and the general text domain.
@@ -790,7 +790,7 @@ The result is:
.Dl Li sptr, ptr),
.Pp
The punctuation is not recognized and all is output in the
-literal font. If the punctuation is separated by a leading
+literal font. If the punctuation is separated by a leading
white space:
.Pp
.Dl \&.Li "sptr , ptr ) ,"
@@ -1133,7 +1133,7 @@ and
may be used with
.Ql \&.Fa
(function argument)
-to get around the limitation. For example:
+to get around the limitation. For example:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
\&.Fo "int res_mkquery"
\&.Fa "int op"
@@ -1282,7 +1282,7 @@ macro is parsed and is callable.
The
.Ql \&.Op
macro
-places option brackets around the any remaining arguments on the command
+places option brackets around any remaining arguments on the command
line, and places any
trailing punctuation outside the brackets.
The macros
@@ -1470,7 +1470,7 @@ macro is
.Em not
parsed and
.Em not
-callable. It accepts at most two arguments.
+callable. It accepts at most two arguments.
.Ss BSD Macro
.Dl Usage: .Bx [Version/release] ... \*(Pu
.Bl -tag -width ".Bx 4.3 ) ," -compact -offset 14n
@@ -1516,7 +1516,7 @@ macros are
.Em not
parsed and
.Em not
-callable. They accept at most two arguments.
+callable. They accept at most two arguments.
.Ss UNIX Macro
.Dl Usage: .Ux ... \*(Pu
.Bl -tag -width ".Ux 4.3 ) ," -compact -offset 14n
@@ -1571,7 +1571,7 @@ All handle punctuation properly, as long as it
is presented one character at a time and separated by spaces.
The quoting macros examine opening and closing punctuation
to determine whether it comes before or after the
-enclosing string. This makes some nesting possible.
+enclosing string. This makes some nesting possible.
.Bl -tag -width xxx,xxxx
.It Li \&.Ec , \&.Eo
These macros expect the first argument to be the
@@ -2729,7 +2729,7 @@ is the name of the defined string or as
where
.Em x
is the name of the string.
-The interpreting sequence may be used any where in the text.
+The interpreting sequence may be used anywhere in the text.
.Pp
.Bl -column "String " "Nroff " "Troff " -offset indent
.It Sy "String Nroff Troff"
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