-Typical usage is as follows. You want to reply or followup to a message
-in your MUA. You will probably hit @kbd{r} (i.e., ``reply'') or @kbd{f}
-(i.e., ``forward'') to begin composing the reply. In response, the MUA
-will create a reply buffer and initialize the outgoing mail headers
-appropriately. The body of the reply will usually be empty at this
-point. You now decide that you would like to include part of the
-original message in your reply. To do this, you @dfn{yank} the original
-message into the reply buffer, typically with a key stroke such as
-@kbd{C-c C-y}. This sequence will invoke an MUA-specific function which
-fills the body of the reply with the original message and then
-@dfn{attributes} this text to its author. This is called @dfn{citing}
-and its effect is to prefix every line from the original message with a
-special text tag. Most MUAs provide some default style of citing; by
-using Supercite you gain a wider flexibility in the look and style of
-citations. Supercite's only job is to cite the original message.
+Typical usage is as follows. You want to reply or followup to a
+message in your MUA@. You will probably hit @kbd{r} (i.e., ``reply'')
+or @kbd{f} (i.e., ``forward'') to begin composing the reply. In
+response, the MUA will create a reply buffer and initialize the
+outgoing mail headers appropriately. The body of the reply will
+usually be empty at this point. You now decide that you would like to
+include part of the original message in your reply. To do this, you
+@dfn{yank} the original message into the reply buffer, typically with
+a key stroke such as @kbd{C-c C-y}. This sequence will invoke an
+MUA-specific function which fills the body of the reply with the
+original message and then @dfn{attributes} this text to its author.
+This is called @dfn{citing} and its effect is to prefix every line
+from the original message with a special text tag. Most MUAs provide
+some default style of citing; by using Supercite you gain a wider
+flexibility in the look and style of citations. Supercite's only job
+is to cite the original message.