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-rw-r--r--nl/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml2
-rw-r--r--nl/partitioning/partition/x86.xml2
-rw-r--r--nl/partitioning/tree.xml2
3 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/nl/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml b/nl/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml
index f022aa633..6aadde151 100644
--- a/nl/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml
+++ b/nl/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ utilities are used to manipulate this partition.
</para><para>
-In order for OpenFirmware to automatically boot &debian; the bootstrap
+In order for OpenFirmware to automatically boot &debian-gnu; the bootstrap
partition should appear before other boot partitions on the disk,
especially MacOS boot partitions. The bootstrap partition should be
the first one you create. However, if you add a bootstrap partition
diff --git a/nl/partitioning/partition/x86.xml b/nl/partitioning/partition/x86.xml
index 0ab228c34..d0e84a611 100644
--- a/nl/partitioning/partition/x86.xml
+++ b/nl/partitioning/partition/x86.xml
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ drive.
Linux limits the partitions per drive to 15 partitions for SCSI disks
(3 usable primary partitions, 12 logical partitions), and 63
partitions on an IDE drive (3 usable primary partitions, 60 logical
-partitions). However the normal &debian; system provides
+partitions). However the normal &debian-gnu; system provides
only 20 devices for partitions, so you may not install on partitions
higher than 20 unless you first manually create devices for those
partitions.
diff --git a/nl/partitioning/tree.xml b/nl/partitioning/tree.xml
index be729f8a4..4ccf016a0 100644
--- a/nl/partitioning/tree.xml
+++ b/nl/partitioning/tree.xml
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
<title>The Directory Tree</title>
<para>
-&debian; adheres to the
+&debian-gnu; adheres to the
<ulink url="&url-fhs-home;">Filesystem Hierarchy Standard</ulink>
for directory and file naming. This standard allows users and software
programs to predict the location of files and directories. The root