--- a/rdf-turtle/index.html Tue May 01 15:44:55 2012 -0700
+++ b/rdf-turtle/index.html Tue May 01 15:53:53 2012 -0700
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@
<p>
This document defines two syntaxes for <a href="../rdf-concepts/index.html">RDF</a> ([[!RDF-CONCEPTS]]), Turtle, the Terse RDF Triple Language, and N-Triples.
- N-Triples is a sublanguage of Turtle intended for machines.
+ N-Triples is a sub-language of Turtle intended for machines.
</p>
<p>
@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@
<p>Often the same subject will be refrenced by a number of predicates. The <a href="#grammar-production-predicateObjectList">predicateObjectList production</a> matches a series of predicates and objects, separated by <code>;</code>, following a subject.
This expresses a series of RDF Triples with that subject and a each predicate and object allocated to one triple.
Thus, the <code>;</code> symbol is used to repeat the subject of triples that vary only in predicate and object RDF terms.</p>
- <p>These two examples are equalivate ways of writing the triples about Spiderman.</p>
+ <p>These two examples are equivalent ways of writing the triples about Spiderman.</p>
<pre class="example"><script type="text/turtle"><http://example.org/#spiderman> <http://www.perceive.net/schemas/relationship/enemyOf> <http://example.org/#green-goblin> ;
<http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name> "Spiderman" .
</script></pre>
@@ -223,7 +223,7 @@
As with predicates often objects are repeated with the same subject and predicate. The <a href="#grammar-production-objectList">objectList production</a> matches a series of objects, separated by <code>,</code>, following a subject and predicate.
This expresses a series of RDF Triples with that subject and predicate and a each object allocated to one triple.
Thus, the <code>,</code> symbol is used to repeat the subject and predicate of triples that only differ in the object RDF term.</p>
- <p>These two examples are equalivate ways of writing Spiderman's name in two languages.<p>
+ <p>These two examples are equivalent ways of writing Spiderman's name in two languages.<p>
<pre class="example"><script type="text/turtle"><http://example.org/#spiderman> <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name> "Spiderman", "Spïdermann"@de .
</script></pre>
<pre class="example"><script type="text/turtle"><http://example.org/#spiderman> <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name> "Spiderman" .
@@ -305,7 +305,8 @@
</p>
<ul>
<li>leading digits, e.g. <code>leg:3032571</code> or <code>isbn13:9780136019701</code></li>
- <li><a href="#reserved">reserved character escape sequences</a>, e.g. <code>og:video\:height</code> or <code>wgs:lat\-long</code></li>
+ <li>non leading colons, e.g. <code>og:video:height</code></li>
+ <li><a href="#reserved">reserved character escape sequences</a>, e.g. <code>wgs:lat\-long</code></li>
</ul>
</div>
</section>
@@ -323,9 +324,6 @@
If none of the above specifies the Base URI, the default Base URI (section 5.1.4, "Default Base URI") is used.
Each <code>@base</code> directive sets a new In-Scope Base URI, relative to the previous one.
</p>
- <p class="issue">
- Totally imposible to follow what the above means. Need set of examples showing diffrent base IRI resolution, and restated @bases
- </p>
</section>
@@ -348,7 +346,7 @@
The representation of the lexical form consists of a delimiting <code>"</code>, a sequence of characters matching the regular expression <code>[^\"\\\n\r]</code> or <a href="#numeric">numeric escape sequence</a> or <a href="#string">string escape sequence</a>, and a final delimiting <code>"</code>.
The corresponding <a href="../rdf-concepts/index.html#dfn-lexical-form">RDF lexical form</a> is the characters between the <code>""</code>s, after processing any escape sequences.
If present, the <a href="../rdf-concepts/index.html#dfn-language-tagged-string">language tag</a> is preceded by a <code>@</code>.
- The datatype IRI in Turtle may be written using either an <a href="#iri-summary">absolute IRI, a realitive IRI or prefixed name</a>.
+ The datatype IRI in Turtle may be written using either an <a href="#iri-summary">absolute IRI, a relative IRI or prefixed name</a>.
If there is no language tag, there may be a <a href="../rdf-concepts/index.html#dfn-datatype-URI">datatype IRI</a>, preceeded by <code>^^</code>.
If there is no datatype IRI and no language tag, the datatype is <code>xsd:string</code>.
</p>
@@ -958,7 +956,7 @@
<section id="sec-conformance">
<h2>Conformance</h2>
- <p class="issue">The Turtle Test Suite has not been updated to reflecte changes in the grammar and design. Test 29 is incorrect.</p>
+ <p class="issue">The Turtle Test Suite has not been updated to reflect changes in the grammar and design. Test 29 is incorrect.</p>
<p>Systems conforming to Turtle MUST pass all the following test cases:</p>
<ol>
@@ -1052,7 +1050,7 @@
</section>
<section id="in-html-parsing">
<h3>Parsing Turtle in HTML</h3>
- <p>There are no syntactic or grammar diffrences between parsing Turtle that has been embedded
+ <p>There are no syntactic or grammar differences between parsing Turtle that has been embedded
and normal Turtle documents. Each <code>script</code> data block is considered to be it's own
Turtle document. <code>@prefix</code>, <code>@base</code> declarations MUST NOT effect other
data blocks. All Turtle data blocks in a HTML document share the same document base URI as the HTML