.B \-t
act as terminal emulator only:
.I sympathy
-opens the terminal device and outputs into the outer terminal emulator, when sympathy exits the
+opens the terminal device and outputs into the outer terminal emulator. When sympathy exits the
device is closed and no process remains. In this mode sympathy behaves like a traditional
terminal emulator such as cu(1) or minicom(1).
.TP 5
act as server only:
.I sympathy
opens the terminal device and renders into an internal frame buffer, listens for clients
-on the socket and logs activity. By default the server will fork into a daemon processes
+on the socket and logs activity. By default the server will fork into a daemon process
but can be forced to remain in the foreground with the \-\fBF\fP option.
.TP 5
.B \-c\fP or \fB\-r\fP \fIid\fP
.I sympathy
writes <baud changed to 19200>. Whenever a modem control line changes state
.I sympathy
-appends <Modem lines changed: \fI+/-line\fP> to the log. Where \fI+\fP
+appends <Modem lines changed: \fI+/-line\fP ...> to the log. Where \fI+\fP
indicates that \fIline\fP was asserted and \fI-\fP indicates that it was de-asserted.
When the terminal device reports receive errors
.I sympathy
the server.
.IP
Later the user wishes to retrieve her session and to determine which sympathy
-sessions are active issues:
+sessions are active and issues:
.IP
[foo@barhost ~]$ sympathy \-ls
.br