\n\
By default, on reading a file, Emacs tries to detect how the text is\n\
encoded. This code detection is sensitive to escape sequences. If\n\
-the sequence is valid as ISO2022, the code is detemined as one of\n\
-ISO2022 encoding, and the file is decoded by the corresponding coding\n\
-system (e.g. `iso-2022-7bit').\n\
+the sequence is valid as ISO2022, the code is determined as one of\n\
+the ISO2022 encodings, and the file is decoded by the corresponding\n\
+coding system (e.g. `iso-2022-7bit').\n\
\n\
However, there may be a case that you want to read escape sequences in\n\
a file as is. In such a case, you can set this variable to non-nil.\n\
Then, as the code detection ignores any escape sequences, no file is\n\
-detected as some of ISO2022 encoding. The result is that all escape\n\
-sequences become visible in a buffer.\n\
+detected as encoded in some ISO2022 encoding. The result is that all\n\
+escape sequences become visible in a buffer.\n\
\n\
The default value is nil, and it is strongly recommended not to change\n\
it. That is because many Emacs Lisp source files that contain\n\
non-ASCII characters are encoded by the coding system `iso-2022-7bit'\n\
in Emacs's distribution, and they won't be decoded correctly on\n\
-reading if you suppress escapse sequence detection.\n\
+reading if you suppress escape sequence detection.\n\
\n\
The other way to read escape sequences in a file without decoding is\n\
-to explicitely specify some coding system that doesn't use ISO2022's\n\
+to explicitly specify some coding system that doesn't use ISO2022's\n\
escape sequence (e.g `latin-1') on reading by \\[universal-coding-system-argument].");
inhibit_iso_escape_detection = 0;
}