@code{-modes} instead of @code{-mode} at the end, i.e.@:
@code{@var{global-mode}s}. This variable will be used in a predicate
function that determines whether the minor mode should be activated in
-a particular major mode. Valid values of @code{:predicate} include
-@code{t} (use in all major modes), @code{nil} (don't use in any major
-modes), or a list of mode names, optionally preceded with @code{not}
-(as in @w{@code{(not @var{mode-name} @dots{})}}). These elements can
-be mixed, as shown in the following examples.
+a particular major mode, and users can customize the value of the
+variable to control the modes in which the minor mode will be switched
+on. Valid values of @code{:predicate} (and thus valid values of the
+user option it creates) include @code{t} (use in all major modes),
+@code{nil} (don't use in any major modes), or a list of mode names,
+optionally preceded with @code{not} (as in @w{@code{(not
+@var{mode-name} @dots{})}}). These elements can be mixed, as shown in
+the following examples.
@example
(c-mode (not mail-mode message-mode) text-mode)
and that should try to turn MODE on if applicable for that buffer.
Each of KEY VALUE is a pair of CL-style keyword arguments.
-The :predicate argument specifies in which major modes should the
+The :predicate key specifies in which major modes should the
globalized minor mode be switched on. The value should be t (meaning
switch on the minor mode in all major modes), nil (meaning don't
switch on in any major mode), a list of modes (meaning switch on only
in those modes and their descendants), or a list (not MODES...),
meaning switch on in any major mode except MODES. The value can also
mix all of these forms, see the info node `Defining Minor Modes' for
-details.
+details. The :predicate key causes the macro to create a user option
+named the same as MODE, but ending with \"-modes\" instead of \"-mode\".
+That user option can then be used to customize in which modes this
+globalized minor mode will be switched on.
As the minor mode defined by this function is always global, any
:global keyword is ignored.
Other keywords have the same meaning as in `define-minor-mode',