diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml
index f3a7a38cdd..3996fdd193 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@
the default partition to boot and the booting timeout.
The beta version of this programs allows you to boot by
selecting the OS with your arrow keys. It is included on
- the FreeBSD CD in the \TOOLS
+ the FreeBSD CD in the \TOOLS
directory, and via ftp.
@@ -191,10 +191,10 @@
1024th cylinder. (The 1024th cylinder is 528 megs into the
disk with our hypothetical 720MB disks). I will use the
rest of the hard drive (about 270 megs) for the
- /usr and / slices if I wish. The
+ /usr and / slices if I wish. The
rest of the second hard disk (size depends on the amount of
my Windows application/data partition that I created in step
- 1) can go to the /usr/src slice and swap
+ 1) can go to the /usr/src slice and swap
space.
@@ -275,7 +275,7 @@ Press Esc to continue
If you install Windows 95 on an existing BSD system, it will
destroy
the MBR, and you will have to reinstall your
previous boot manager. Boot Easy can be reinstalled by using
- the BOOTINST.EXE utility included in the \TOOLS directory on the
+ the BOOTINST.EXE utility included in the \TOOLS directory on the
CDROM, and via ftp.
You can also re-start the installation process and go to the