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-rw-r--r--doc/emacs/calendar.texi11
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/emacs/calendar.texi b/doc/emacs/calendar.texi
index ed1f53fa70b..be5af998e7e 100644
--- a/doc/emacs/calendar.texi
+++ b/doc/emacs/calendar.texi
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ planned or past events. It also has facilities for managing your
appointments, and keeping track of how much time you spend working on
certain projects.
- To enter the calendar, type @kbd{M-x calendar}; this displays a
+ To enter the calendar, type @kbd{M-x calendar}. This displays a
three-month calendar centered on the current month, with point on the
current date. With a numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u M-x calendar}, it
prompts you for the month and year to be the center of the three-month
@@ -126,10 +126,11 @@ whole year.
The easiest way to remember these commands is to consider months and
years analogous to paragraphs and pages of text, respectively. But
-the commands themselves are not quite analogous. The ordinary Emacs
-paragraph commands move to the beginning or end of a paragraph,
-whereas these month and year commands move by an entire month or an
-entire year, keeping the same date within the month or year.
+the calendar movement commands themselves do not quite parallel those
+for movement through text: the ordinary Emacs paragraph commands move
+to the beginning or end of a paragraph, whereas these month and year
+commands move by an entire month or an entire year, keeping the same
+date within the month or year.
All these commands accept a numeric argument as a repeat count.
For convenience, the digit keys and the minus sign specify numeric