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authorEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2015-09-16 12:56:45 +0300
committerEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2015-09-16 12:56:45 +0300
commit31ff037ab849a8d5d9b871a8927154ffb38a8694 (patch)
treed49f924e77049ed9d2cce4e08c0357bf45ca98d1 /doc/emacs/glossary.texi
parentbc67e467603afe8ca1b9751b23a663e2e0d65f57 (diff)
downloademacs-31ff037ab849a8d5d9b871a8927154ffb38a8694.tar.gz
Restore some of the quoting in the manuals
* doc/lispref/windows.texi (Coordinates and Windows) (Coordinates and Windows): * doc/lispref/variables.texi (Lexical Binding) (File Local Variables): * doc/lispref/text.texi (Format Properties): * doc/lispref/symbols.texi (Symbol Components): * doc/lispref/strings.texi (Creating Strings): * doc/lispref/sequences.texi (Sequence Functions): * doc/lispref/searching.texi (Regexp Special, Regexp Search) (Search and Replace): * doc/lispref/processes.texi (Bindat Spec): * doc/lispref/os.texi (Idle Timers): * doc/lispref/objects.texi (Basic Char Syntax): * doc/lispref/numbers.texi (Float Basics, Random Numbers): * doc/lispref/nonascii.texi (Character Properties): * doc/lispref/modes.texi (Major Mode Conventions, Mode Hooks) (Mode Line Variables): * doc/lispref/minibuf.texi (Text from Minibuffer): * doc/lispref/loading.texi (Autoload): * doc/lispref/keymaps.texi (Controlling Active Maps): * doc/lispref/frames.texi (Frame Layout, Size and Position) (Size Parameters, Implied Frame Resizing): * doc/lispref/files.texi (Changing Files, Magic File Names): * doc/lispref/eval.texi (Self-Evaluating Forms): * doc/lispref/display.texi (Progress, Abstract Display) (Abstract Display Example, Bidirectional Display): * doc/lispref/commands.texi (Event Mod): * doc/emacs/windows.texi (Displaying Buffers): * doc/emacs/trouble.texi (Bug Criteria, Checklist): * doc/emacs/text.texi (Enriched Text): * doc/emacs/programs.texi (MixedCase Words): * doc/emacs/picture-xtra.texi (Insert in Picture) (Tabs in Picture): * doc/emacs/misc.texi (Emacs Server, Printing): * doc/emacs/mini.texi (Minibuffer History): * doc/emacs/maintaining.texi (Old Revisions, VC Change Log) (Pulling / Pushing): * doc/emacs/killing.texi (Yanking, Cut and Paste, Clipboard): * doc/emacs/help.texi (Help, Help Echo): * doc/emacs/glossary.texi (Glossary): * doc/emacs/frames.texi (Mouse Commands, Creating Frames) (Frame Commands): * doc/emacs/files.texi (Reverting, Saving, Directories): * doc/emacs/entering.texi (Exiting): * doc/emacs/emacs.texi (Top): * doc/emacs/cmdargs.texi (Window Size X, Icons X): * doc/emacs/anti.texi (Antinews): Restore quoting of text where appropriate or replace quoting with @dfn. * doc/misc/ediff.texi (Window and Frame Configuration): * doc/lispref/processes.texi (Network Feature Testing): * doc/lispref/display.texi (Display Margins): Quote the phrase after "a.k.a." where appropriate.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/emacs/glossary.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/emacs/glossary.texi6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/emacs/glossary.texi b/doc/emacs/glossary.texi
index ef186723d6b..e66cd79e740 100644
--- a/doc/emacs/glossary.texi
+++ b/doc/emacs/glossary.texi
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ A base buffer is a buffer whose text is shared by an indirect buffer
Some human languages, such as English, are written from left to right.
Others, such as Arabic, are written from right to left. Emacs
supports both of these forms, as well as any mixture of them---this
-is bidirectional text. @xref{Bidirectional Editing}.
+is ``bidirectional text''. @xref{Bidirectional Editing}.
@item Bind
To bind a key sequence means to give it a binding (q.v.).
@@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ Variables}.
@item Dired
Dired is the Emacs facility that displays the contents of a file
-directory and allows you to edit the directory, performing
+directory and allows you to ``edit the directory'', performing
operations on the files in the directory. @xref{Dired}.
@item Disabled Command
@@ -580,7 +580,7 @@ For more information, see @uref{http://fsf.org/, the FSF website}.
@item Fringe
On a graphical display (q.v.), there's a narrow portion of the frame
(q.v.@:) between the text area and the window's border. These
-fringes are used to display symbols that provide information about
+``fringes'' are used to display symbols that provide information about
the buffer text (@pxref{Fringes}). Emacs displays the fringe using a
special face (q.v.@:) called @code{fringe}. @xref{Faces,fringe}.