M-C-SPC M-C-SPC, for example.
+++
-** M-h (mark-pagaraph) now accepts a prefix arg. If positive, mark
-current and following pargraphs; if negative, mark current and
-preceding paragraphs.
+** M-h (mark-pagaraph) now accepts a prefix arg.
+With positive arg, M-h marks the current and the following pargraphs;
+if the arg is negative, it marks the current and the preceding
+paragraphs.
** mouse-wheels can now scroll a specific fraction of the window
(rather than a fixed number of lines) and the scrolling is `progressive'.
@findex mark-whole-buffer
Other commands set both point and mark, to delimit an object in the
buffer. For example, @kbd{M-h} (@code{mark-paragraph}) moves point to
-the beginning of the paragraph that surrounds or follows point, and puts
-the mark at the end of that paragraph (@pxref{Paragraphs}). It prepares
-the region so you can indent, case-convert, or kill a whole paragraph.
-The command also accepts a prefix argument. If the prefix argument
-is positive, @kbd{M-h} marks that many paragraphs, the paragraph
-surrounding point plus some following paragraphs. If the prefix
-argument is negative, @kbd{M-h} also marks that many paragraphs, but
-the preceding instead of the following paragraphs. (With a positive
-argument, point is put at the beginning and mark at end, with a
-negative argument, point is at end and mark at the beginning.)
+the beginning of the paragraph that surrounds or follows point, and
+puts the mark at the end of that paragraph (@pxref{Paragraphs}). It
+prepares the region so you can indent, case-convert, or kill a whole
+paragraph. With prefix argument, if the argument's value is positive,
+@kbd{M-h} marks that many paragraphs, the paragraph surrounding point
+plus some following paragraphs. If the prefix argument is negative,
+@kbd{M-h} also marks that many paragraphs, but the preceding ones
+instead of the following. (With a positive argument, point is put
+at the beginning and mark at end, with a negative argument, point is
+at end and mark at the beginning.)
@kbd{C-M-h} (@code{mark-defun}) similarly puts point before, and the
mark after, the current (or following) major top-level definition, or