Great – I have learned something new.
Thanks Eli for all your work.
From:
Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
Date: Sunday, 14 November 2021 at 19:14
To: morzahavi@me.com <morzahavi@me.com>
Cc: stefan@marxist.se <stefan@marxist.se>, 51271@debbugs.gnu.org <51271@debbugs.gnu.org>
Subject: Re: bug#51271: Typo's in Emacs documentation
> From: "morzahavi@me.com" <morzahavi@me.com>
> CC: "stefan@marxist.se" <stefan@marxist.se>, "51271@debbugs.gnu.org"
> <51271@debbugs.gnu.org>
> Date: Sun, 14 Nov 2021 16:59:21 +0000
>
> I don’t understand – how can there be many kinds of a singular form? How can there be a few of a singular
> form?
It's a special English form that is relatively rarely used. But it is
nevertheless correct.
> Where is the comment you’ve added?
In the Texinfo source. I show it below:
@c This and the next paragraph say ``kinds of atom'', but that is not
@c a typo, just slightly ``old-fashioned wording which adds a fillip
@c of interest to it'', and ``is more elegant writing'', according to
@c RMS.
As you see, I consulted with Richard Stallman about this issue,
because I had a gut feeling the original wording was correct, but
wasn't sure. Bob Chassell, who wrote that manual, always used 100%
correct English.