Re: [PATCH] Took care of some grammatical mistakes

From: Miroslav Benes
Date: Wed Nov 29 2023 - 05:08:59 EST


On Tue, 28 Nov 2023, Randy Dunlap wrote:

>
>
> On 11/28/23 06:12, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> > On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 11:41:31AM -0800, Randy Dunlap wrote:
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> On 11/27/23 07:57, attreyee-muk wrote:
> >>> Respected Maintainers,
> >>>
> >>> I have made some grammatical changes in the livepatch.rst file where I
> >>> felt that the sentence would have sounded more correct and would have become easy for
> >>> beginners to understand by reading.
> >>> Requesting review of my proposed changes from the mainatiners.
> >>>
> >>> Thank You
> >>> Attreyee Mukherjee
> >>>
> >>> Signed-off-by: attreyee-muk <tintinm2017@xxxxxxxxx>
> >>> ---
> >>> Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst | 8 ++++----
> >>> 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
> >>>
> >>> diff --git a/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst b/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst
> >>> index 68e3651e8af9..a2d2317b7d6b 100644
> >>> --- a/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst
> >>> +++ b/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst
> >>> @@ -35,11 +35,11 @@ and livepatching:
> >>>
> >>> All three approaches need to modify the existing code at runtime. Therefore
> >>> -they need to be aware of each other and not step over each other's toes.
> >>> +they need to be aware of each other and not step over each others' toes.
> >>
> >> I've never seen that written like that, so I disagree here. FWIW.
> >
> > "Step over" is new to me too. I see "step on" much more often.
>
> Agreed.

Yes. Attreyee, please fix this instead.

> > As far as placement of the apostrophe,
> > https://ludwig.guru/s/step+on+each+others+toes
> > suggests either omitting the apostrophe or placing it after the s,
> > as attreyee-muk has done is most common.
>
> Apparently you can find anything on the internet. :)
>
> Here's the other side:
>
> https://jakubmarian.com/each-others-vs-each-others-in-english/

I am not a native speaker, but "step on each other's toe" sounds the best
to me. Or perhaps even "they need to be aware of each other and not step
on their toes" since it is then kind of implied? English is difficult :).

Miroslav