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authorSimon Perreault <nomis80@videotron.ca>2001-03-22 04:07:23 +0000
committerSimon Perreault <nomis80@videotron.ca>2001-03-22 04:07:23 +0000
commit77ae47c1a0d29bef97b4d4bcbeace8a7e707a366 (patch)
treefb3007bbd4a6bb092748b0c931f77f64172fc4cd /chapter03
parentd251197d3300a32c4d088454d7123a460dcb2a35 (diff)
Grammar fixes.
git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@349 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689
Diffstat (limited to 'chapter03')
-rw-r--r--chapter03/creatingpart.xml9
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/chapter03/creatingpart.xml b/chapter03/creatingpart.xml
index f1b3c02ec..d5d14f2f5 100644
--- a/chapter03/creatingpart.xml
+++ b/chapter03/creatingpart.xml
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
Before we can build our new Linux system, we need to have an empty Linux
partition on which we can build our new system. I recommend a partition size
of around 750 MB. This gives enough space to store all the tarballs and
-to compile all packages without worrying running out of the necessary
+to compile all packages without worrying about running out of the necessary
temporary disk space. If a Linux Native partition is already available,
this subsection can be skipped.
</para>
@@ -13,9 +13,10 @@ this subsection can be skipped.
<para>
The cfdisk program (or another fdisk like program the user prefers) is
started with the
-appropriate hard disk as the option (like /dev/hda if he wants to create a
-new partition on the primary master IDE disk). He creates a Linux Native
-partition, writes the partition table and exits the cfdisk program.
+appropriate hard disk as the option (like /dev/hda if the gentle reader
+wants to create a
+new partition on the primary master IDE disk). It is used to create a Linux
+Native partition, write the partition table and exit the cfdisk program.
The new partition's designation should be remembered. It could be something
like hda11 (as it is in my case). This newly created partition will be
referred to as the LFS partition in this book.