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Forum nameThe Computer Forum
Topic subjectRE: Line breaks
Topic URLhttp://www.pcqanda.com/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=2&topic_id=565820&mesg_id=565822
565822, RE: Line breaks
Posted by aptfourd, Thu Jan-17-19 10:25 PM
Quote:
QUOTE:
.doc file?
.txt file?

Word?
edlin?

Vim:

%s/<\r\n>/ /g
!]] fmt -w 80



;-).


It is a .doc file and the following is an example of the kind of layout to which I'm referring, although it actually has a paragraph sign at the end of each line and this needs cancelling so that each line prints right up to the right hand side of the page.

Many thanks for your help.

Masculine and Feminine Nouns
In Spanish all nouns are masculine or feminine. Usually, nouns that end with an "o" are masculine, and nouns that end with an "a" are feminine. For example,"manzana" (apple) is feminine and "diario" (newspaper) is masculine.
The articles "el" and "un" are used with masculine nouns, and the articles "la" and"una" are used with feminine nouns. "The apple" is "la manzana" and "a newspaper" is "un diario."
Accent Marks
Vowels in Spanish can have an accent mark, such as the "u" in "menú" (menu).
One use of the accent mark is to indicate which syllable should be stressed in
the pronunciation. For example, in "teléfono" (telephone), the second "e" has the
most stress.
Accent marks are also used to distinguish homophones. For example, "él" and
"el" are homophones because they have the same pronunciation. However, "él"
is a masculine pronoun (meaning "he" or "him") and "el" is a masculine article
(meaning "the").
The Second Person Singular